Filed: Nov. 29, 2012
Latest Update: Feb. 12, 2020
Summary: 10-583-cr(L) United States v. Coplan UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT August Term, 2011 (Argued: November 14, 2011 Decided: November 29, 2012) _ UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Appellee, v. ROBERT COPLAN, MARTIN NISSENBAUM, RICHARD SHAPIRO, BRIAN VAUGHN, CHARLES BOLTON, Defendants-Appellants, DAVID L. SMITH, Defendant. _ Before: KEARSE, MCLAUGHLIN, and CABRANES, Circuit Judges. Defendants Robert Coplan, Martin Nissenbaum, Richard Shapiro, and Brian Vaughn appeal from judgments of
Summary: 10-583-cr(L) United States v. Coplan UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT August Term, 2011 (Argued: November 14, 2011 Decided: November 29, 2012) _ UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Appellee, v. ROBERT COPLAN, MARTIN NISSENBAUM, RICHARD SHAPIRO, BRIAN VAUGHN, CHARLES BOLTON, Defendants-Appellants, DAVID L. SMITH, Defendant. _ Before: KEARSE, MCLAUGHLIN, and CABRANES, Circuit Judges. Defendants Robert Coplan, Martin Nissenbaum, Richard Shapiro, and Brian Vaughn appeal from judgments of c..
More
10-583-cr(L)
United States v. Coplan
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT
August Term, 2011
(Argued: November 14, 2011 Decided: November 29, 2012)
_______________________________________________________________________________
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
Appellee,
v.
ROBERT COPLAN, MARTIN NISSENBAUM,
RICHARD SHAPIRO, BRIAN VAUGHN, CHARLES BOLTON,
Defendants-Appellants,
DAVID L. SMITH,
Defendant.
_______________________________________________________________________________
Before: KEARSE, MCLAUGHLIN, and CABRANES, Circuit Judges.
Defendants Robert Coplan, Martin Nissenbaum, Richard Shapiro, and Brian Vaughn appeal
from judgments of conviction entered on January 28, 2010 in the United States District Court for
the Southern District of New York (Sidney H. Stein, Judge), following a 10-week jury trial on charges
of conspiracy to defraud the Government, tax evasion, obstruction of the Internal Revenue Service
(“IRS”), and false statements to the IRS. Defendant Charles Bolton appeals from an April 14, 2010
judgment of conviction entered by the District Court following his guilty plea, pursuant to a plea
agreement that contained a limited appeal waiver, to a single conspiracy charge.
1
We affirm the convictions of Coplan and Vaughn, reverse the convictions of Shapiro and
Nissenbaum, and vacate and remand the portion of Bolton’s sentence imposing a $3 million fine.
Judge Kearse dissents in part in a separate opinion.
RICHARD C. TARLOWE, Assistant United States Attorney,
(Mark Lanpher, Andrea L. Surratt, and Katherine Polk
Failla, Assistant United States Attorneys, on the brief), for
Preet Bharara, United States Attorney for the Southern
District of New York, New York, NY, for Appellee
United States of America.
DENNIS P. RIORDAN, (Donald M. Horgan and Gary Dubcoff,
on the brief), Riordan & Horgan, San Francisco, CA;
Ted Sampsell Jones, William Mitchell College of Law,
St. Paul, MN, for Defendant-Appellant Robert Coplan.
NATHAN LEWIN, (Alyza D. Lewin, on the brief), Lewin &
Lewin, LLP, Washington, DC, for Defendant-Appellant
Martin Nissenbaum.
ALEXANDRA A.E. SHAPIRO, (Marc E. Isserles and James
Darrow, on the brief), Macht, Shapiro, Arato & Isserles
LLP, New York, NY; Morvillo, Abramowitz, Grand,
Iason, Anello & Bohrer, P.C., New York, NY, of counsel;
for Defendant-Appellant Richard Shapiro.
ROBERT G. ANDERSON, (Donna Brown Jacobs, on the brief)
Butler, Snow, O’Mara, Stevens & Cannada, PLLC,
Ridgeland, MS, for Defendant-Appellant Brian Vaughn.
MARC N. GARBER, The Garber Law Firm, P.C., Marietta,
GA, for Defendant-Appellant Charles Bolton.
Joshua L. Dratel, Joshua L. Dratel, P.C., New York, NY, for
amicus curiae New York Council of Defense Lawyers;
Laura Grossfield Birger and Rachel B. Kane, Cooley
LLP, New York, NY, for amicus curiae National
Association of Criminal Defense Lawyers; in support of
Defendants-Appellants.
2
JOSÉ A. CABRANES, Circuit Judge:
We consider here the fate of four partners and employees of Ernst & Young, LLP (“E&Y”),
one of the largest accounting firms in the world, who appeal their convictions in connection with the
development and defense of five “tax shelters” that were sold or implemented by E&Y between
1999 and 2001. At issue, among other things, is the scope of criminal liability in a conspiracy to
defraud the United States under 18 U.S.C. § 371 and the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to
the criminal intent of certain defendants.
The defendants in these consolidated actions are three tax attorneys, Robert Coplan, Martin
Nissenbaum, and Richard Shapiro, and one accountant, Brian Vaughn, formerly employed by E&Y.
A fifth defendant, Charles Bolton, was an investment advisor who owned and operated various
asset-management companies.1 Coplan, Nissenbaum, Shapiro, and Vaughn (jointly, the “trial
defendants”) appeal from separate judgments of conviction entered by the United States District
Court for the Southern District of New York (Sidney H. Stein, Judge) on February 17, 2010,
following a 10-week jury trial on charges of conspiracy to defraud the Government, tax evasion,
obstruction of the Internal Revenue Service (“IRS”), and false statements to the IRS. Bolton
appeals from a judgment of conviction entered by the District Court on April 14, 2010, following his
plea of guilty to a single conspiracy charge.2
For the reasons that follow, we reverse the convictions of Shapiro and Nissenbaum on
Counts One, Two, and Three, and the conviction of Nissenbaum on Count Four, and we affirm the
convictions of Coplan and Vaughn in their entirety. We affirm the District Court’s order sentencing
1 David Smith, the sixth defendant charged in this case, was a fugitive at the time of trial and is not a party to this
appeal.
2Bolton’s plea agreement contained a limited appeal waiver that permitted him to appeal any sentence exceeding six
months of imprisonment based on the application of U.S.S.G. § 2T1.9. Because Bolton’s sentence exceeded six months
of imprisonment and was based on the application of § 2T1.9, his appeal is properly before us.
3
Bolton principally to 15 months of imprisonment, but we vacate and remand the portion of the
judgment that imposed a fine of $3 million.
BACKGROUND
The evidence underlying the convictions, viewed “in the light most favorable to the
prosecution,” Jackson v. Virginia,
443 U.S. 307, 319 (1979), established the following facts.
I. Facts
In 1998, E&Y formed a new group tasked with designing tax strategies, or “tax shelters,”3 to
market to “high net worth” individuals who were seeking to shelter at least $20 million from income
tax liability. Originally called the “VIPER” Group (for “Value Ideas Produce Extraordinary
Results”), the group was renamed “SISG” (for “Strategic Individual Solutions Group”) in 2000.
Coplan, Nissenbaum, Shapiro, and Vaughn were the core members of the VIPER Group/SISG.
The facts of this case principally relate to the design, implementation, and audit defense of four tax
shelters developed by the VIPER Group/SISG: the (1) Contingent Deferred Swap (“CDS”); (2)
Currency Options Bring Reward Alternatives (“COBRA”); (3) CDS Add-On (“Add-On”); and (4)
Personal Investment Corporation (“PICO”) shelters. Coplan, Nissenbaum, and Shapiro also
personally invested in a fifth tax shelter, known as the “E&Y 11 Transaction” or “Tradehill,” which
was not marketed to E&Y clients. Although the IRS audited all five tax shelters, only the Add-On
shelter was later subject to tax evasion charges. With respect to the other four tax shelters, the
charged conduct principally relates to alleged false or misleading statements made by the defendants
3 As the jury was instructed:
[T]he term “tax shelter” refers to investments that have the potential for substantial tax savings as
one of [their] main benefits. Some tax shelters are legal; other tax shelters are not, it all depends on
the particular facts.
A I: 562–63/490–91.
4
in connection with the IRS audits, as demonstrated by the defendants’ internal correspondence,
deposition testimony, and written submissions to the IRS.
Since the details of the tax shelters and the supporting tax law are largely irrelevant on
appeal, we briefly summarize the (necessarily oversimplified) operation of these transactions as
follows.
A. The CDS Shelter
The CDS shelter was a tax “deferral and conversion” strategy that allowed a taxpayer to
convert ordinary income into long-term capital gains and defer tax liability to the year after the
income was earned. The taxpayer would form a securities trading partnership in which the taxpayer
served as limited partner and another entity served as general partner. The partnership would then
engage in a large volume of short-term trading and invest in an 18-month swap transaction. Because
of the “trader” status of the partnership, swap payments made by the partnership were deducted as
business expenses. If the swap was terminated early (i.e. before maturity), but after 12 months, the
payments received by the partnership were taxed at the (significantly lower) capital gains rate rather
than the ordinary income rate. Treatment of these payments as capital gains depended upon the
“early termination” of the swap, which allowed the payment to be characterized as a “termination
payment” under the applicable regulations.
B. The COBRA Shelter
The COBRA shelter was a tax “elimination” strategy that involved creating an asset with a
high “basis” for tax purposes, which the taxpayer could then sell and generate a deductible loss. The
taxpayer would create a limited liability company (“LLC”) that would purchase a pair of offsetting
“digital”4 foreign currency options that involved a bet on how a particular foreign currency would
4 “A ‘digital’ option—often referred to as an ‘all-or-nothing’ option—is an option whose payout is fixed as long as the
5
perform against the U.S. dollar in 30 days. Prior to the maturity of the options, the taxpayer would
contribute the option contracts to an investment partnership. After the options expired, the
investment partnership was liquidated and the taxpayer’s interest in the partnership was transferred
to a Subchapter S corporation (“S corporation”),5 which would sell the assets and realize a
deductible tax loss.
C. The Add-On Shelter
The Add-On shelter was a tax strategy marketed as a means to defer indefinitely income tax
liability on capital gains, including the capital gains generated in the second year of the CDS strategy.
Like COBRA, Add-On involved the purchase of offsetting digital option pairs, followed by a series
of transactions designed to generate a tax loss. The offsetting options were structured so that there
was a “one-pip” gap6 between their strike prices, so that, in a theoretical “home run” scenario, a
taxpayer could make a multimillion dollar profit. Unlike CDS and COBRA, however, there was no
reasonable possibility of earning a profit from Add-On apart from the “home run” scenario, since
the Add-On fee structure required payments to E&Y and the entity acting as general partner that
exceeded the potential payoff. As a result, Add-On was the sole tax shelter developed by the
defendants that was subject to substantive tax evasion charges.7
spot price exceeds the strike price; that is, the payout does not increase as the difference between the spot price and the
strike price increases.” Gov’t’s Br. 33-34 n.**.
5 A Subchapter S corporation is a corporation that makes a valid election to be taxed under Subchapter S of the Internal
Revenue Code. See 26 U.S.C. §§ 1361–1379. “Subchapter S allows shareholders of qualified corporations to elect a
‘pass-through’ taxation system under which income is subjected to only one level of taxation. The corporation’s profits
pass through directly to its shareholders on a pro rata basis and are reported on the shareholders’ individual tax returns.”
Gitlitz v. C.I.R.,
531 U.S. 206, 209 (2001) (internal citations omitted).
6 A “one-pip” gap is the smallest possible “spread” in an option pair.
7See A III: 567/5548 (Government’s summation) (“Now, Counts Two and Three of the indictment charge all four
defendants with tax evasion, but only with respect to the Add-on transaction, and that’s why I have emphasized that the
other shelters are not charged as tax evasion.”).
6
D. The PICO Shelter
The PICO shelter was a tax deferral and conversion strategy that involved an investment in
an S corporation with another shareholder. The taxpayer would purchase 20% of the stock of the S
corporation, while another person associated with the Bricolage investment firm (which helped to
implement the transaction) would purchase the remaining 80% interest. The S corporation (also
known as the Personal Investment Corporation, or “PICO”) would then purchase so-called
“straddles,” financial instruments that generated offsetting gains and losses on foreign currencies,
interest rates, or commodities. After building up a sufficient inventory of “losing” bets, the PICO
would buy out the 80% shareholder. Under a tax regulation, the 80% shareholder would be
allocated his share of the gains recognized by the PICO up to the time of redemption, and all the
gains and losses recognized thereafter (i.e. most of the losses) would be allocated to the taxpayer.
After contributing additional assets to the PICO, the taxpayer could then take the desired deduction.
E. The Tradehill Shelter
Unlike the other four tax shelters, the Tradehill shelter was marketed only to E&Y partners.
After E&Y sold the consulting arm of its business to a French company called Cap Gemini in 2000,
each E&Y partner received an allocation of Cap Gemini stock. Eleven E&Y partners participated in
Tradehill, which was designed to eliminate the tax due on the income they recognized from the Cap
Gemini transaction. Like COBRA and Add-On, Tradehill involved the formation of numerous
corporate entities and the contribution of option pairs from one entity to another.
We note that similar tax shelters were marketed and sold by other major accounting firms
and law firms as part of a lucrative “tax avoidance” practice that flourished in the late 1990s.8 See
8 Indeed, the record in this case supports an inference that E&Y was not the first to implement the types of tax shelters
at issue. See, e.g., A IV: 114 (internal e-mail noting that “seven major law firms, AA [Arthur Anderson], and KPMG are
7
generally The Role of Professional Firms in the U.S. Tax Shelter Industry, S. Rep. No. 109-54, at 3 (2005). In
February 2000, the IRS created the Office of Tax Shelter Analysis and subsequently issued a series
of notices directed at “abusive” tax shelters.9 An April 2005 report issued by the Permanent
Subcommittee on Investigations of the Senate Committee on Homeland Security and Governmental
Affairs stated that “[u]nder current law, no single standard defines an abusive tax shelter.”
Id. The
report further noted that “[o]ver the past 10 years, Federal statutes and regulations prohibiting illegal
tax shelters have undergone repeated revision to clarify and strengthen them.”
Id. Although this
case does not require us to comment on the substance of those revisions, we think it useful to
acknowledge that the law with respect to tax shelters has evolved since E&Y formed the VIPER
Group in 1998.
II. Procedural History
A federal grand jury returned a sealed indictment on May 22, 2007, and a superseding
indictment on February 19, 2008, charging the defendants in thirteen counts with a wide-ranging
conspiracy to defraud the United States through the development, sale, and implementation of the
E&Y tax shelters. The superseding indictment was redacted to seven counts (the “Redacted
Indictment”) for the trial of Coplan, Nissenbaum, Shapiro, and Vaughn.10
selling the short option strategy”); A II: 92/1086 (client inquiry about whether E&Y offered a tax elimination strategy
similar to that presented by another consulting group).
9 See Partnership―Audit Technique Guide, ch. 9, available at http://www.irs.gov/Businesses/Partnerships/Partnership--
-Audit-Technique-Guide---Chapter-9---Tax-Shelters---The-Disclosure-Regime-(Revised-12-2007) (last visited Nov. 26,
2012).
10 See Appendix A for an overview of the Redacted Indictment and Information. As noted above, David Smith was
also charged in the Superseding Indictment, but was a fugitive at the time of trial.
8
Count One of the Redacted Indictment charged each trial defendant with a conspiracy, in
violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371,11 with three objectives: (1) to defraud the United States by impairing
the lawful governmental functions of the IRS (known as a “Klein conspiracy,” see United States v. Klein,
247 F.2d 908, 915 (2d Cir. 1957)); (2) to commit tax evasion in connection with the Add-On tax
shelter, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201;12 and (3) to make false statements to the IRS, in violation of
18 U.S.C. § 1001.13
Counts Two and Three charged each trial defendant with tax evasion, in violation of
26 U.S.C. § 7201, in connection with the Add-On tax shelter.
Counts Four and Five charged Nissenbaum and Coplan, respectively, with obstructing the
IRS, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7212.14
11Section 371 provides, in relevant part, that “[i]f two or more persons conspire either to commit any offense against
the United States, or to defraud the United States, or any agency thereof in any manner or for any purpose, and one or
more of such persons do any act to effect the object of the conspiracy, each shall be fined under this title or imprisoned
not more than five years, or both.” 18 U.S.C. § 371.
12 Section 7201 provides, in relevant part, that “[a]ny person who willfully attempts in any manner to evade or defeat any
tax imposed by this title or the payment thereof shall, in addition to other penalties provided by law, be guilty of a
felony.” 26 U.S.C. § 7201.
13 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a) provides, in relevant part:
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of
the executive, legislative, or judicial branch of the Government of the United States, knowingly
and willfully—
(1) falsifies, conceals, or covers up by any trick, scheme, or device a material fact;
(2) makes any materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or representation; or
(3) makes or uses any false writing or document knowing the same to contain any materially false,
fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry;
shall be fined under this title, imprisoned not more than 5 years . . . or both.
18 U.S.C. § 1001(a).
14 Section 7212(a) provides, in relevant part, that “[w]hoever corruptly or by force or threats of force . . . obstructs or
impedes, or endeavors to obstruct or impede, the due administration of this title, shall, upon conviction thereof, be
fined not more than $5,000, or imprisoned not more than 3 years, or both.” 26 U.S.C. § 7212(a).
9
Counts Six and Seven charged Vaughn and Coplan, respectively, with making false
statements to the IRS, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001.
Trial commenced on March 3, 2009, with the beginning of jury selection. At trial, the
Government sought to demonstrate that the defendants conspired to conceal the true nature of the
five tax shelters by creating a variety of “cover stories” regarding the purported business purpose of
the shelters, when in fact the shelters were motivated solely by a desire to avoid taxes.15 In essence,
the Government sought to demonstrate that the defendants hid the truth from the IRS by
withholding information and making affirmative misstatements. On May 7, 2009, the jury returned
a general verdict of guilty on all counts. On January 21 and 22, 2010, the District Court sentenced
the trial defendants principally as follows: Coplan was sentenced to 36 months of imprisonment,
three years of supervised release, and a $75,000 fine; Nissenbaum was sentenced to 30 months of
imprisonment, three years of supervised release, and a $100,000 fine; Shapiro was sentenced to 28
months of imprisonment, two years of supervised release, and a $100,000 fine; and Vaughn was
sentenced to 20 months of imprisonment and two years of supervised release. The judgments of
conviction for the trial defendants were entered on January 28, 2010.
Prior to trial, on January 22, 2009, Bolton pleaded guilty to a Superseding Information
charging him with a single count of conspiracy, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, having three
objectives: (1) to defraud the United States by impeding, impairing, defeating, and obstructing the
lawful governmental functions of the IRS (the so-called “Klein conspiracy”); (2) to make false
statements to the IRS, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001; and (3) to corruptly obstruct and impede the
administration of the internal revenue laws, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7212(a). On April 14, 2010,
15The IRS can disallow deductions resulting from a transaction that “can not [sic] with reason be said to have purpose,
substance, or utility apart from [its] anticipated tax consequences. Such transactions are said to lack ‘economic
substance.’” Lee v. Comm’r,
155 F.3d 584, 586 (2d Cir. 1998) (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
10
the District Court entered a judgment of conviction sentencing Bolton principally to 15 months of
imprisonment and a $3 million fine.
The defendants have remained free on bail pending the resolution of this appeal.
DISCUSSION
The defendants raise no fewer than ten challenges to their respective convictions and
sentences on appeal, which we briefly summarize as follows: (1) the Government’s Klein conspiracy
theory was legally invalid, (2) there was insufficient evidence to support (a) the convictions of
Shapiro and Nissenbaum on Count One, the conspiracy charge, (b) the convictions of Shapiro and
Nissenbaum on Counts Two and Three, the tax evasion charges, and (c) Nissenbaum’s conviction
on Count Four, the obstruction charge, (3) the District Court erred in finding that venue was proper
for Count Six, which charged Vaughn with false statements to the IRS, (4) the District Court erred
by admitting the testimony of alleged coconspirator Graham Taylor, a tax attorney who committed a
variety of crimes involving tax shelters unrelated to this case, (5) the District Court erred in
admitting the out-of-court statements of more than 20 alleged coconspirators, (6) the District Court
erred in excluding portions of Coplan’s and Vaughn’s deposition transcripts, (7) the defendants were
prejudiced by prosecutorial misconduct in the Government’s rebuttal summation, (8) the District
Court erred in (a) declining to give a “theory of the defense” instruction, (b) instructing the jury on a
conscious avoidance theory; and (c) instructing the jury that “economic substance” existed only if
there was a “reasonable possibility” of profit, (9) spillover prejudice infected Coplan’s and Vaughn’s
remaining convictions, and (10) Bolton’s sentence was procedurally and substantively unreasonable.
11
I. Validity of the Government’s Klein Conspiracy Theory
The first issue on appeal concerns the legal validity of the Government’s Klein conspiracy
theory under the “defraud clause” of 18 U.S.C. § 371.16 As previously noted, Count One of the
Redacted Indictment charged Coplan, Nissenbaum, Shapiro, and Vaughn in a § 371 conspiracy with
three objectives: (1) to defraud the United States (the Klein conspiracy), (2) to evade taxes, and (3) to
make false statements to the IRS. The core objective argued by the Government at trial was the
Klein conspiracy, and that conspiracy forms the primary focus of the defendants’ arguments on
appeal.
A. The Origins of the Klein Conspiracy
Enacted in 1867, the original federal conspiracy statute was appended to “An Act to amend
existing Laws relating to Internal Revenue and for other Purposes.” Abraham S. Goldstein,
Conspiracy to Defraud the United States, 68 Yale L.J. 405, 418 (1959) (quoting Act of March 2, 1867,
ch. 169, § 30, 14 Stat. 484). In the 1875 codification, the statute was moved from its place among
the internal revenue measures and included among the general penal provisions.
Id. at 418 n.36. In
United States v. Hirsch,
100 U.S. 33 (1879), the Supreme Court held that the conspiracy provision was
generally applicable to the whole body of federal law. In so holding, the Court described the
prohibited fraud as “any fraud against [the United States]. It may be against the coin, or consist in
cheating the government of its land or other property.”
Id. at 35.
“It is a well-established rule of construction that where Congress uses terms that have
accumulated settled meaning under . . . the common law, a court must infer, unless the statute
otherwise dictates, that Congress means to incorporate the established meaning of these terms.”
16Section 371 prohibits all conspiracies either “to commit any offense against the United States” (the “offense clause”),
or “to defraud the United States, or any agency thereof in any manner or for any purpose” (the “defraud clause”). 18
U.S.C. § 371.
12
Neder v. United States,
527 U.S. 1, 21 (1999) (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted)
(omission in the original). At common law, the words “to defraud” meant to deprive another of
property rights by dishonest means.17 See Hammerschmidt v. United States,
265 U.S. 182, 188 (1924);
Porcelli v. United States,
303 F.3d 452, 457 n.1 (2d Cir. 2002) (noting that the “familiar common law
meaning” of the term ‘“fraud”’ involved “using falsity to do the victim out of money or property
interests”). Other federal criminal statutes are generally in accord. See, e.g., United States v. Pierce,
224
F.3d 158, 165 (2d Cir. 2000) (“In the context of mail fraud and wire fraud, the words ‘to defraud’
commonly refer ‘to wronging one in his property rights by dishonest methods or schemes’ . . . .”
(quotation marks omitted)).
Nonetheless, the word “defraud” in § 371 has been interpreted much more broadly. The
current understanding of “conspiracy to defraud” liability may be traced to two seminal Supreme
Court cases. In the first case, Haas v. Henkel,
216 U.S. 462 (1910), the defendants obtained advance
information from a statistician employed by the Department of Agriculture in order to gain a
speculating advantage in the grain futures market. The Court invoked an expansive reading of the
word “defraud” to bring the defendants’ conduct within the conspiracy statute. Specifically, the
Court held that “it is not essential that such a conspiracy shall contemplate a financial loss or that
one shall result. The statute is broad enough in its terms to include any conspiracy for the purpose
of impairing, obstructing, or defeating the lawful function of any department of government.”
Id. at
479.
17 In the authoritative dictionary of the day, “defraud” was defined as “[t]o deprive of right by fraud, deception or
artifice.” The American Dictionary of the English Language 347 (1864). “Fraud” was defined as “[d]eception deliberately
practiced with a view to gaining an unlawful or unfair advantage; artifice by which the right or interest of another is
injured; injurious stratagem; deceit; trick.”
Id. at 541. The American Dictionary of the English Language, published by Noah
Webster in 1864, is, of course, not to be confused with the American Heritage Dictionary of the English Language, published
by Houghton Mifflin in 1969, or any modern dictionary bearing the surname of the great American lexicographer.
13
Fourteen years later, in Hammerschmidt v. United States,
265 U.S. 182 (1924), the Court
attempted to retrench from the expansive reading of § 371 in Haas. In the words of Professor (later,
Dean) Abraham S. Goldstein of the Yale Law School, “[t]he expansive reading of the statute in Haas
. . . finally led the Supreme Court to attempt a systematic examination of what the judiciary had
wrought. Hammerschmidt v. United States furnished the occasion.” Goldstein, 68 Yale L.J. at 429
(footnote omitted). The Hammerschmidt defendants were convicted of a conspiracy to defraud the
United States by interfering with the World War I military draft through the printing and circulation
of handbills urging those subject to the draft not to obey it. The Supreme Court reversed the
convictions under § 371, holding that “[t]o conspire to defraud the United States means primarily to
cheat the government out of property or money, but it also means to interfere with or obstruct one
of its lawful governmental functions by deceit, craft or trickery, or at least by means that are dishonest.”
Hammerschmidt, 265 U.S. at 188 (emphasis added). Because the defendants’ “open defiance” of the
Selective Service Act was devoid of deceit or other trickery, the Supreme Court held that their
conduct did not fall within the scope of § 371.
Id. at 189.
The Klein conspiracy doctrine at issue here is the progeny of Haas and Hammerschmidt.18 In
United States v. Klein,
247 F.2d 908, 916 (2d Cir. 1957), the defendants were charged with tax evasion
and a “defraud conspiracy” in connection with their whiskey selling business.
Id. at 915–16. The
district court entered judgments of acquittal on the substantive counts, and the jury convicted on the
remaining § 371 conspiracy count. On appeal, we found sufficient evidence to support the § 371
conspiracy conviction based on twenty “acts of concealment of income,” including false statements
on tax returns and in interrogatory responses.
Id. at 915. Relying on Hammerschmidt, we held that
18Indeed, the appellation “Klein conspiracy” is in some sense a misnomer, since the primary holding of Klein is a
quotation from Hammerschmidt.
14
[m]ere failure to disclose income would not be sufficient to show the crime charged
of defrauding the United States under 18 U.S.C. § 371. The statute, however, not
only includes the cheating of the government out of property or money, but “also
means to interfere with or obstruct one of its lawful governmental functions by
deceit, craft or trickery, or at least by means that are dishonest.”
Id. at 916 (quoting Hammerschmidt, 265 U.S. at 188). Thus, in order to prove a Klein conspiracy, the
Government must show “(1) that [the] defendant entered into an agreement (2) to obstruct a lawful
function of the Government (3) by deceitful or dishonest means and (4) at least one overt act in
furtherance of the conspiracy.” United States v. Ballistrea,
101 F.3d 827, 832 (2d Cir. 1996) (alteration
omitted).
B. The Challenge to Klein
The defendants argue vigorously on appeal that the Klein conspiracy theory is textually
unfounded. The Government’s stare decisis defense of the Klein doctrine lends support to this view,
as it rests entirely on the construction of § 371 in Hammerschmidt. There is nothing in the
Government’s brief recognizable as statutory interpretation—no discussion of plain meaning,
legislative history, or interpretive canons. Indeed, in all 325 pages of its brief, the Government does
not even quote the text of § 371. The Government thus appears implicitly to concede that the Klein
conspiracy is a common law crime, created by the courts rather than by Congress. That fact alone
warrants considerable judicial skepticism. See United States v. Lanier,
520 U.S. 259, 267 n.6 (1997)
(“Federal crimes are defined by Congress, not the courts . . . .”); see also Rogers v. Tennessee,
532 U.S.
451, 476 (2001) (Scalia, J., dissenting) (“[T]he notion of a common-law crime is utterly anathema
today . . . .”).
To justify an expansive reading of § 371, courts have occasionally implied that a conspiracy
to defraud the Government is to be read more broadly than a conspiracy to defraud a private person.
See Goldstein, 68 Yale L.J. at 424. Dicta in McNally v. United States,
483 U.S. 350 (1987), for example,
15
accepted such a distinction. Quoting a decision of the Court of Appeals for the First Circuit, the
Supreme Court stated that “‘[a] statute which . . . has for its object the protection of the individual
property rights of the members of the civic body, is one thing; a statute which has for its object the
protection and welfare of the government alone, which exists for the purpose of administering itself
in the interests of the public, [is] quite another.’”
Id. at 359 n.8 (quoting Curley v. United States,
130 F.
1, 7 (1st Cir. 1904) (alterations in original)). But this conclusion appears to rest on a policy
judgment—that, in the nature of things, government interests justify broader protection that the
interests of private parties—rather than on any principle of statutory interpretation.
Notwithstanding these infirmities in the history and deployment of the statute, it is now well
established that § 371 “is not confined to fraud as that term has been defined in the common law,”
but reaches “‘any conspiracy for the purpose of impairing, obstructing or defeating the lawful
function of any department of Government.’” Dennis v. United States,
384 U.S. 855, 861 (1966)
(quoting
Haas, 216 U.S. at 479). Indeed, Coplan (whose counsel “takes the laboring oar” on the
Klein conspiracy issue) “readily concedes that, were the weight of this Circuit’s case law outcome-
determinative in this matter, his challenge to the government’s Klein theory would fail.” Coplan
Reply 3.
Although the defendants argue forcefully on appeal that we should follow the example of
Skilling v. United States,
130 S. Ct. 2896, 2928 (2010), and “pare” the body of § 371 precedent “down
to its core,”
id., such arguments are properly directed to a higher authority. As an intermediate
appellate court, we are bound to follow the dictates of Supreme Court precedents, no matter how
persuasive we find the arguments for breaking loose from the moorings of established judicial
norms by “paring” a statute.
16
In sum, because the Klein doctrine derives from and falls within the scope of the law of the
Circuit (itself grounded on long-lived Supreme Court decisions), we reject the defendants’ challenge
to the validity of that theory of criminal liability.
II. The Sufficiency Challenges
In addition to challenging the legal validity of the Klein conspiracy theory, defendants
Shapiro and Nissenbaum mount a series of sufficiency challenges.19 As a general matter, a
defendant challenging the sufficiency of the evidence that led to his conviction at trial “bears a heavy
burden,” United States v. Heras,
609 F.3d 101, 105 (2d Cir. 2010) (quotation marks omitted), as the
standard of review is “exceedingly deferential,” United States v. Hassan,
578 F.3d 108, 126 (2d Cir.
2008). In evaluating a sufficiency challenge, we “must view the evidence in the light most favorable
to the government, crediting every inference that could have been drawn in the government’s favor,
and deferring to the jury’s assessment of witness credibility and its assessment of the weight of the
evidence.” United States v. Chavez,
549 F.3d 119, 124 (2d Cir. 2008) (internal citations, alterations and
quotation marks omitted)). Although sufficiency review is de novo, United States v. Yannotti,
541 F.3d
112, 120 (2d Cir. 2008), we will uphold the judgments of conviction if “any rational trier of fact
could have found the essential elements of the crime beyond a reasonable doubt,”
Jackson, 443 U.S.
at 319.
A. Sufficiency of the Evidence Supporting Count One
Defendants Shapiro and Nissenbaum first challenge the sufficiency of the evidence with
respect to each of the three alleged objectives of the § 371 conspiracy. As previously noted, Count
One of the Redacted Indictment charged the trial defendants in a § 371 conspiracy with three
19Vaughn joins in Shapiro’s argument regarding the insufficiency of the evidence to prove a Klein conspiracy, but raises
no specific sufficiency challenges of his own. Coplan does not raise a sufficiency challenge.
17
objectives: (1) to defraud the United States (the Klein conspiracy); (2) to evade taxes, in violation of
26 U.S.C. § 7201; and (3) to make false statements to the IRS, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001.
“To sustain a conspiracy conviction, the Government must present some evidence from
which it can reasonably be inferred that the person charged with conspiracy knew of the existence of
the scheme alleged in the indictment and knowingly joined and participated in it.” United States v.
Rodriguez,
392 F.3d 539, 545 (2d Cir. 2004) (quotation marks omitted). In the context of a
conspiracy conviction, “deference to the jury’s findings is especially important . . . because a
conspiracy by its very nature is a secretive operation, and it is a rare case where all aspects of a
conspiracy can be laid bare in court.” United States v. Rojas,
617 F.3d 669, 674 (2d Cir. 2010)
(quotation marks omitted) (alteration in original). Where, as here, “a jury returns a guilty verdict on
an indictment charging several acts in the conjunctive, . . . the verdict stands if the evidence is
sufficient with respect to any one of the acts charged.” Griffin v. United States,
502 U.S. 46, 56–57
(1991) (quotation marks omitted). For that reason, “the lack of sufficient evidence to support one
of the objects of a multi-object conspiracy [will] not vitiate the conspiracy conviction, where there
[i]s sufficient evidence to support [another] object.” United States v. Pascarella,
84 F.3d 61, 71 (2d Cir.
1996).
In what follows, we consider the conspiracy evidence against defendants Shapiro and
Nissenbaum, mindful that “[t]he character and effect of a conspiracy are not to be judged by
dismembering it and viewing its separate parts, but only by looking at it as a whole,” Cont’l Ore Co. v.
Union Carbide & Carbon Corp.,
370 U.S. 690, 699 (1962) (quotation marks omitted). Nevertheless, for
the sake of clarity and ease of analysis, we examine the evidence with respect to each alleged
objective of the conspiracy in some detail before considering the conspiracy “as a whole.” For the
18
reasons that follow, we conclude that the evidence with respect to the intent of Shapiro and
Nissenbaum is insufficient to support their convictions on Count One.
1. Conspiracy Evidence Against Shapiro
i. Klein Conspiracy Objective
The centerpiece of the conspiracy case against Shapiro, an E&Y partner and tax lawyer with
nearly four decades’ experience, is the Government’s claim that he “coached” E&Y partner Thomas
Dougherty to lie to the IRS by helping him come up with non-tax explanations for the COBRA
transaction that Shapiro knew were not true. In rebuttal summation, the Government argued that
“[i]f you credit Mr. Dougherty’s testimony, . . . that alone is proof beyond a reasonable doubt on the
conspiracy count at least as to . . . Mr. Shapiro.” On appeal, the Government similarly argues that
Dougherty’s testimony “standing alone . . . would be sufficient to support his conviction on the false
statements object of the conspiracy.” Indeed, variations on the assertion that Shapiro “coached”
Dougherty to lie appear no fewer than four times in the Government’s brief. See Gov’t’s Br. 67,
112, 117, 134.
But the record with respect to Dougherty’s testimony is considerably more equivocal than in
the Government’s account.
April 2, 2001 Conference Call. Dougherty testified that in March 2001, he advised Coplan that
the IRS was auditing the WRB Lake transaction20—the first such audit of a COBRA transaction. In
response, Coplan informed Dougherty that Dennis Conlon, an attorney in E&Y’s national tax
practice, would coordinate the audit response. On April 2, 2001, Dougherty participated in a
conference call with Coplan and Conlon that involved a discussion of “ideas that may be presented
20The “WRB Lake” transaction was a COBRA transaction named for the three business partners who executed the
shelter with the assistance of Dougherty.
19
to the agent for why [the clients] did the steps that they did” in executing the COBRA transaction.
Following the initial conference call, Conlon sent an e-mail indicating that, “I think we need Richard
[Shapiro] at the first meeting,” because “I want to state our case clearly and correctly from the
beginning.”
April 24, 2001 Conference Call. On April 24, 2001, Dougherty participated in a conference call
with Conlon, Coplan, and Shapiro. According to Dougherty’s contemporaneous notes, Shapiro
raised the topic of the business purpose of the COBRA transaction during the call.
May 16, 2001 Preparation Meeting. Dougherty testified that on May 16, 2001, “Conlon led [a]
meeting to prepare Richard Shapiro and myself for our meeting the next day with the IRS.” At that
meeting, Conlon coordinated the assignment of discussion topics for the IRS meeting, reviewed the
relevant points of the IRS Information Document Request (“IDR”), and “anticipated . . . questions
that would come up during the IRS meeting.”
May 17, 2001 IRS Meeting. The following day, Conlon, Dougherty, and Shapiro met with the
IRS to discuss the WRB Lake COBRA transaction. During that meeting, Dougherty falsely
represented that E&Y “mentioned the tax and financial implications of foreign currency
investments” to the clients involved in the WRB Lake transaction, and that the clients “became
interested” in the COBRA transaction as a result. Dougherty testified at trial that in fact his
discussion of foreign currency investment with the clients was “strictly limited to discussions we had
in the presentation of the COBRA transaction,” and that he had “lied [to the IRS agents] about the
reasons for [the clients] entering into the COBRA transaction.” Although Dougherty testified that
he had told Shapiro “the real facts” about how the WRB clients “had come to Ernst & Young for
the COBRA transaction,” he did not elaborate on the substance of that conversation.
20
On these facts, the Government repeatedly asserts that “Dougherty testified specifically that
in consultation with Coplan and Shapiro, he lied to the IRS,” and that “Coplan and Shapiro coached
Dougherty to provide false information to the IRS.” But the record support for these assertions is
slim at best. With respect to the April 24, 2001 conference call, Dougherty’s notes indicate that
Shapiro asked a single question: “What is the business purpose?” During the May 16, 2001
preparation meeting, Conlon—not Shapiro—led the meeting, reviewed the IDR, anticipated
potential IRS questions, and coordinated “who [would] . . . talk about what topics” at the meeting.
Contrary to the Government’s assertion, Dougherty testified on cross-examination that Shapiro
“never told [him] to lie” and did not suggest lying to the IRS in order to conceal “problems” with
the COBRA transaction. Crucially, Dougherty further testified that Shapiro himself “believed
[COBRA] worked under the law.”
Beyond the Dougherty testimony, the Government also claims that Shapiro engaged in
various acts that, while not “inherently deceptive,” were deceptive “in the context of this case,” as
follows.
Promotional Materials. The Government faults Shapiro for his participation in E&Y’s policy
of discouraging personnel from leaving PowerPoint slides and other marketing materials with
clients, in case the IRS should demand copies of those materials from the client during an audit. See,
e.g., A V: 42 (Shapiro e-mail stating that presentation materials should not be left with the client).
The Government claims that Shapiro and others enforced this policy to prevent the marketing
materials, which laid out each step of the underlying transactions, from falling into the hands of the
IRS. The Government does not argue, however, that the IRS ever requested copies of the
21
promotional materials held in E&Y’s own files, or that governing ethical standards required E&Y to
disclose those materials in the absence of such a request.21
Early Termination. Similarly, the Government highlights Shapiro’s editorial comments on an
internal “Action Plan” that summarized the steps involved in the CDS tax shelter. Shapiro advised
his E&Y colleagues to avoid references to the “early” termination of the CDS swap contracts.22 The
Government characterizes Shapiro’s advice as an “underhanded effort[ ] to protect the descriptions
of CDS that were designed to convince the agents of something the defendants knew to be false.”
Gov’t’s Br. 122 (internal quotation marks omitted). As the Government reluctantly concedes,
however, the CDS swap contracts provided that either party could elect to terminate the swap before
the maturity date—but imposed no obligation to do so. Indeed, several clients inquired about
continuing the swaps to the maturity date because they were “interested in the swap profits,” and
were told that doing so would lead to deferral of income, but not conversion from ordinary to
capital gain. In the end, no CDS swap extended past the early termination date. Although Shapiro’s
edits to the CDS “Action Plan” clearly deemphasized the prevailing expectation of early termination,
it appears that the revised version was in fact more accurate in its summary of the swap contract terms.
Advice to Keep CDS Trading Account Open. As an additional example of deception “in
context,” the Government points to a suggestion by Coplan, Shapiro, and Nissenbaum that CDS
clients continue trading past the early termination date in order to “mak[e] their tax argument as
strong as possible.” A IV: 214; see
id. at 212 (Shapiro e-mail advocating “keeping the trading account
active” in light of the “upside and no down side”);
id. at 219. The Government argues that this
21 Cf. ABA Model Rules of Prof’l Conduct, pmbl. ¶ 9 (2006) (reaffirming basic principle of “the lawyer’s obligation
zealously to protect and pursue a client’s legitimate interests, within the bounds of the law”).
22 In the original draft of the CDS Action Plan, Step 45 read as follows: “At the appropriate time during the swap
period, GP will terminate the swaps with the bank.” In response to Shapiro’s advice, Step 45 was edited to read, “Swap
terminates.”
22
advice “was designed to protect the bogus descriptions of CDS.” Gov’t’s Br. 122. There is no
dispute, however, that the substance of the advice advocated lawful trading activity.
Review of PICO Documents. Finally, the Government points to Shapiro’s development and
review of various documents related to the PICO tax shelter as evidence of his “involvement in
providing false information directly to the IRS.” Gov’t’s Br. 135. For example, the Government
highlights Shapiro’s involvement in drafting the PICO opinion letter with outside counsel, Peter
Cinquegrani, who was then special counsel at Arnold & Porter. The Government argues, inter alia,
that the opinion letter contained misleading statements because it described PICO as an
“opportunity to create personal investment companies,” A V: 504, when the “real reason” for the
transaction “was to provide tax losses for investors,” A III: 114/3756. Cinquegrani, the self-
described “principal wordsmith” of the opinion letter, testified at trial that he intended the opinion
letter to be misleading because his “intention was to describe the transaction as much as possible as
an ordinary business deal and to downplay all the tax aspects.” There is little such evidence with
respect to Shapiro’s intent. The record of communication between Cinquegrani and Shapiro reflects
a sometimes tense working relationship, in which Shapiro repeatedly raised questions and concerns
about the language of the draft opinion. See A III: 144/3873–145/3876 (Cinquegrani testimony
describing Shapiro as “a pain” and “high maintenance” because he “would frequently ask the same
questions multiple times” and “would revisit the same issues that had previously been addressed”).
For example, Shapiro expressed “concern” that “the nature of the rep[resentation]s investors are
making . . . may be too strong.” A IV: 455. On several occasions, Shapiro proposed revisions that
Cinquegrani incorporated into PICO documents. As a result, an early representation that PICO
clients had a “principal” investment purpose was replaced by a representation that PICO clients had
a “substantial nontax business purpose.” A III: 165/ 3955–56. Shapiro also questioned a draft
23
version of the opinion letter that inaccurately suggested that the tax consequences of the PICO
transaction were not discussed with clients. A IV: 457. As a result, the final opinion letter disclosed
that potential PICO investors were “provided an overview of the economics of the trading strategy,
including potential tax consequences.” A V: 575.
The Government argues strenuously on appeal that the final opinion letter still contained lies
and misleading statements about the “real reason” for the PICO transaction. But we note that, as
Cinquegrani himself testified, the very fact that an opinion letter was prepared indicates that the client
anticipated substantial tax benefits from the transaction. A III: 146/3880–81. Thus, to fault
Shapiro because the opinion letter failed affirmatively to state that the “real reason” for the PICO
transaction was “to provide tax losses” borders on the spurious. At a minimum, Shapiro’s conduct
with respect to the crafting of the PICO opinion letter appears equally consistent with good faith in
his role as a “technician” tasked with making sure the transactions were structured in compliance
with tax law. A III: 140/3857–58 (Cinquegrani testimony); see also A II: 544–45/2865–67 (Six
testimony); A III: 398/4882 (Rydberg testimony).23
ii. Tax Evasion Objective
Shapiro also challenges the sufficiency of the evidence with respect to the tax evasion
objective of the § 371 conspiracy charged in Count One. “It is elementary that conspiracy is a crime,
separate and distinct from the substantive offense.” United States v. Pinckney,
85 F.3d 4, 8 (2d Cir.
1996). “Although the government need not prove commission of the substantive offense” to secure
a conspiracy conviction, “it must prove that the intended future conduct [the conspirators] agreed
upon includes all the elements of the substantive crime.”
Id. (internal quotation marks and
23 For the sake of convenience and to avoid undue repetition, we set forth the evidence with respect to Shapiro’s
involvement in the Add-On tax shelter under the rubric of the tax evasion objective below. Our analysis of that
evidence is, of course, equally applicable in connection with the Klein conspiracy objective.
24
alterations omitted). In this case, the substantive crime of tax evasion requires proof of “(1) the
existence of a substantial tax debt, (2) willfulness of the nonpayment, and (3) an affirmative act by
the defendant, performed with intent to evade or defeat the calculation or payment of the tax.”
United States v. Litwok,
678 F.3d 208, 215 (2d Cir. 2012) (quotation marks omitted); see 26 U.S.C.
§ 7201.
The Government’s sole tax deficiency theory at trial was that the Add-On tax shelter offered
investors no reasonable possibility of profit, and that the tax losses resulting from Add-On therefore
could not properly be deducted from the investors’ tax returns. The Government argued that, in
order to create a non-tax explanation for the mechanics of the Add-On transaction, the trial
defendants adopted a false “cover story” proposed by Bolton. That cover story attributed a key step
in the Add-On transaction—the transfer of digital options from the individual partnership to a
newly formed LLC—to a request from trader Andrew Krieger to consolidate accounts for
administrative convenience. There was no meaningful dispute at trial that the “consolidation cover
story” was false.
The Government argues that sufficient evidence supported the tax evasion objective because
Shapiro “w[as] involved at critical junctures of Add-On’s development, marketing, and defense.” In
what follows, we consider the evidence with respect to Shapiro’s involvement at each of these
“critical junctures.”
Add-On Development. The parties do not dispute that the strategy for the Add-On tax shelter
was initially proposed by Vaughn and thereafter developed by Vaughn, Coplan, and members of the
investment firm operated by Bolton. Although Shapiro received copies of early e-mails describing a
“precursor concept” to the Add-On shelter, and participated in telephone conferences about that
preliminary idea, the “specifics” of the transaction were only developed subsequently. A III:
25
237/4241; see A II: 496/2674 (this was “not the way the Add-On transaction ultimately came to
be”). Moreover, Shapiro did not attend an early meeting at which the alleged “cover story” was
discussed, was not involved in drafting the factual section of the Add-On legal opinion letter, and
was excluded from e-mails in which others discussed the economics of the transaction.
Add-On Marketing. The Government’s claim that Shapiro was involved in marketing the
Add-On shelter rests primarily on his receipt of various e-mails. In June 2000, Coplan sent Vaughn,
Shapiro, and Nissenbaum a proposed e-mail to other E&Y professionals announcing the new Add-
On shelter, and asked them to review for “accuracy and tone.” A IV: 127. That e-mail repeated the
consolidation cover story. Similarly, in July 2000, Coplan sent an e-mail asking Vaughn, Shapiro,
Nissenbaum, and others to “make any final changes” to a draft client solicitation letter. But contrary
to the Government’s assertions, there is no evidence that Shapiro actually or habitually “reviewed”
the Add-On solicitation letters before they were sent to clients. Indeed, according to the trial
testimony of cooperator Belle Six, Shapiro was not among the people who were “part of th[e]
process” of “sending out letters to clients.” A II: 424–25/2391–93.
Shapiro maintains that he had no reason to understand or suspect the economics of the
Add-On shelter until February 12, 2003—years after the Add-On marketing campaign—when he
received draft “Talking Points” that contained the details necessary to assess the profit potential of
the transaction.24 After reviewing the draft, Shapiro asked whether “the 2:1 ratio”25 describing
24Under the so-called “objective” prong of the economic substance doctrine, transactions that lack profit potential may
be disallowed by the IRS. See Jerome B. Libin, Congress Should Address Tax Avoidance Head-On: The Internal Revenue Code
Needs a GAAR, 30 Va. Tax Rev. 339, 345–46 (2010) (“Some lower courts have viewed ‘economic substance’ as a test
having two separate requirements (subjective business purpose and objective pre-tax profit potential) that must be
satisfied before a transaction will be accorded the tax benefits claimed.”); see also Modern Tax Controversies, 957 Practicing
Law Inst. 478-1, 478-35 (2012) (“To analyze a transaction for the presence of objective economic substance, courts look
to see if there is an objective potential for profit and/or the presence of genuine risk.”).
25 The “2:1 ratio” (profit: premium) refers to the fact that, absent the highly unlikely “home run” scenario discussed post,
the potential payoff of the Add-On transaction before fees was “two times the net investment amount.”
26
potential payoff was “correct” and what “the impact of fees” was on the profitability of the
transaction. He then learned from Coplan that “[a]pparently, in the [A]dd-[O]n the 2:1 payoff would
not exceed the transaction fees paid to E&Y and Bolton totaling 1.5% of the loss amount since the net
premium was under 1%.” A V: 20 (emphasis added). The Government offers no explanation for
why Shapiro would ask about the payoff ratio and impact of fees if he already knew that the Add-
On shelter lacked profit potential.
Add-On Defense. The Government further argues that, by “reviewing and approving” a chart
for use in an IRS deposition, Shapiro himself committed an affirmative act of tax evasion. The chart
at issue depicted the “home run” or “sweet spot” scenario in which the Add-On shelter would
produce a huge windfall to the client. Although the Government conceded at trial that “the
numbers on the chart are true,” it argues that the chart was used to mislead the IRS by attempting to
establish a false non-tax motivation for a transaction. In response, Shapiro argues that there is no
evidence that he did anything affirmative with the chart, which correctly sets forth a variety of
outcomes for the transaction, including the extraordinarily unlikely “home run.” At most, Shapiro’s
time records reflect that “he reviewed it” for an hour and a half.
Finally, the Government points to correspondence regarding the Add-On “amnesty
template” as evidence of Shapiro’s participation in a tax evasion conspiracy.26 It appears that
Shapiro did provide comments on the Add-On amnesty template, although the record does not
reflect the scope or content of his suggestions. The Government faults Shapiro for leaving the
cover story undisturbed in the amnesty template, but it is not at all apparent that Shapiro in fact
knew that the cover story was “bogus.” The Government argues that because Shapiro had seen an
26In December 2001, the IRS announced an amnesty program under which taxpayers who had engaged in tax shelters
could voluntarily disclose those transactions to the IRS in order to avoid potential penalties. The defendants helped to
craft amnesty templates that E&Y’s clients could submit to the IRS.
27
“instant message” from Vaughn proposing the Add-On concept, he knew that the “consolidation”
business purpose was false. But nothing in the instant message exchange suggested that the Add-On
business purpose was false; instead, the cover story was developed during conference calls and e-
mail correspondence in which Shapiro did not participate.
iii. False Statement Objective
The third and final objective of the § 371 conspiracy imputed to Shapiro and charged in Count
One, the false statements objective, was clearly directed to the conduct charged in Counts Six and
Seven. See A VI: 420/6161 (“Section 1001 is not only charged as an object of the conspiracy, but is
also charged in Counts Six and Seven as separate substantive offenses against defendants Coplan and
Vaughn . . . .”). As previously noted, Counts Six and Seven charged defendants Coplan and Vaughn
with making false statements to the IRS. The Government does not contend that Shapiro even knew
about the Coplan and Vaughn depositions before they occurred, much less discussed their testimony
with them. There was no separate substantive false statements charge against Shapiro in connection
with his own IRS deposition.
iv. The Conspiracy “As a Whole”
Having reviewed the record and the arguments of counsel, we conclude that the evidence
against Shapiro is insufficient to support his conviction on Count One. In reaching this conclusion, we
are mindful that the absence of direct evidence is not dispositive, since “the government is entitled to
prove its case solely through circumstantial evidence.” United States v. Rodriguez,
392 F.3d 539, 544 (2d
Cir. 2004). Nevertheless, “[i]f the evidence viewed in the light most favorable to the prosecution gives
equal or nearly equal circumstantial support to a theory of guilt and a theory of innocence, then a
reasonable jury must necessarily entertain a reasonable doubt.” United States v. Huezo,
546 F.3d 174, 193
(2d Cir. 2008) (internal quotation marks omitted). In this case, an essential element of the conspiracy
28
charged in Count One required proof beyond a reasonable doubt that Shapiro joined the alleged
conspiracy with the “specific intent” to violate the law. United States v. Ogando,
547 F.3d 102, 107–08
(2d Cir. 2008);
Rodriguez, 392 F.3d at 545 (“To sustain a conspiracy conviction, the government must
present some evidence from which it can reasonably be inferred that the person charged with
conspiracy knew of the existence of the scheme alleged in the indictment and knowingly joined and
participated in it.”) (emphasis added) (quotation marks omitted). The evidence with respect to Shapiro’s
intent, viewed in the light most favorable to the Government, remains, at best, in equipoise. Because
“[i]t would not satisfy the [Constitution] to have a jury determine that the defendant is probably guilty,”
Sullivan v. Louisiana,
508 U.S. 275, 278 (1993), we conclude that Shapiro’s conviction on Count One
must be reversed.
2. Conspiracy Evidence Against Nissenbaum
i. Klein Conspiracy Objective
PICO Amnesty Template. The principal conspiracy evidence against Nissenbaum relates to his
participation in the development of the PICO amnesty template. See note 26, ante. The Government
asserts that Nissenbaum “drafted, and then circulated to Shapiro and Coplan for their review, a
template for the PICO amnesty submission.” The strongest evidence to support the Government’s
assertion is a February 28, 2002 e-mail Nissenbaum sent to Shapiro and Coplan with the draft PICO
template attached. The text of the e-mail reads as follows: “Gentlemen, your comments. Bob, did you
also want me to do an SDI template [referring to a different tax shelter]?” Because the PICO template
contained false and misleading descriptions of the transaction, the Government claims that
Nissenbaum knowingly participated in providing false information directly to the IRS. But once again,
the record belies the Government’s gloss. Dougherty testified that he “drafted the [PICO] amnesty
letters based on a template from the SISG tool kit,” and that the template “generally tracked the
29
opinion letter” for the transaction. With respect to Nissenbaum’s role in developing the template,
Dougherty testified as follows:
My recollection was that Martin Nissenbaum was the reviewer of the template letters
that I prepared and he provided some non-substantive comments on the final
version of the letters to go out to the clients.
A II: 235/1641. Dougherty further testified that the “non-substantive comments” Nissenbaum
provided were to “take out the bold” and “correct[] a typo.”
Advice to Keep CDS Trading Account Open. The e-mail chain regarding the extension of the CDS
trading account, raised with respect to Shapiro above, see Part II.A.1.i, ante, also features in the
conspiracy case against Nissenbaum. In a November 12, 2001 e-mail, Coplan asked Shapiro and
Nissenbaum about a CDS shelter in which “[t]heir swaps have terminated, but Bolton is suggesting that
the partnership be shut down after essentially 13.5 months.” A IV: 219. Coplan’s question was
whether E&Y should “intercede and suggest running another year out with the trading account?”
Nissenbaum responded: “Yes. They sound way too anxious to get out.” From this exchange, the
Government argues that “[t]he defendants were understandably concerned about the taxpayers
appearing ‘too anxious to get out’ of the trading account because that hasty exit would undermine the
false description of the trading account as an investment vehicle.”
But it appears that, in the context of the e-mail exchange, the pronoun “they” in Nissenbaum’s
two-sentence e-mail is not a reference to anxious “taxpayers.” The e-mail appended to Coplan’s initial
inquiry was a note from Cam Hasseltine, an employee of the Bolton firm, which was managing the
CDS trading accounts. Hasseltine’s e-mail, which suggested the termination of the CDS account, was
addressed to Robert Coplan, Belle Six, and two other E&Y employees—not to the taxpayer clients at
issue. If anyone was “too anxious to get out” of the CDS shelter, it was the Bolton employees managing
the trading accounts, not the taxpayers who entered the transaction.
30
Review of Add-On Documents. Finally, the Government points to Nissenbaum’s review of various
Add-On documents as evidence of his participation in the Klein conspiracy. In March 2000, Coplan
sent a draft Add-On amnesty template to Nissenbaum, Shapiro, and another E&Y employee with a
request to look it over “to avoid unnecessary facts or to make it easier to complete accurately.” Twenty
minutes later,27 Nissenbaum replied with a three-line e-mail:
The disclosure looks fine to me except that I don’t believe that it’s necessary to put
the specifics of each option trade in the letter. If we do it here, presumably we’d
have to include the hundreds of trades that are done in PICO.
A IV: 400. Nothing in Nissenbaum’s response evinced a knowing “stamp of approval” for the
consolidation cover story in the Add-On amnesty template. Similarly, Nissenbaum also received a July
2000 e-mail from Coplan suggesting that Nissenbaum and others should make “any final changes” to a
draft Add-On client solicitation letter. But, as with Shapiro, there is no evidence that Nissenbaum
actually “reviewed” the Add-On solicitation letters; nor was he “part of th[e] process” of “sending out
letters to clients.”
ii. Tax Evasion Objective
With respect to the alleged tax evasion objective of the § 371 conspiracy, Nissenbaum contends
that the evidence is similarly insufficient. Nissenbaum did not participate in telephone conferences or
meetings related to the development of the Add-On shelter. Although Nissenbaum occasionally
received copies of e-mail correspondence related to Add-On, it appears that he responded only once—
in the three-line e-mail quoted above. Indeed, the Government appeared to acknowledge the dearth of
direct evidence as to Nissenbaum in response to his motion for a judgment of acquittal pursuant to
Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 29. See A III: 516 (Nissenbaum “[a]dmittedly . . . doesn’t have the
same involvement that Mr. Coplan and Mr. Vaughn and Mr. Shapiro do”).
27The time stamp on Coplan’s initial e-mail was 9:16 a.m.; the time stamp on Nissenbaum’s reply was 8:36 a.m. Thus, it
appears that the clock on one of the two computers was off by one hour.
31
Instead, the Government’s principal theory of tax evasion liability for Nissenbaum was based
on Pinkerton v. United States,
328 U.S. 640 (1946). Under Pinkerton, “[o]nce a conspiracy has been
established, the criminal liability of its members extends to all acts of wrongdoing occurring during the
course of and in furtherance of the conspiracy.” United States v. Gallerani,
68 F.3d 611, 620 (2d Cir.
1995) (internal quotation marks omitted). Pinkerton is not “a broad principle of vicarious liability that
imposes criminal responsibility upon every co-conspirator for whatever substantive offenses any of
their confederates commit.” United States v. Bruno,
383 F.3d 65, 90 (2d Cir. 2004) (quotation marks
omitted). Instead, Pinkerton provides that “a defendant who does not directly commit a substantive
offense may nevertheless be liable if the commission of the offense by a co-conspirator in furtherance
of the conspiracy was reasonably foreseeable to the defendant as a consequence of their criminal
agreement.” United States v. Parkes,
497 F.3d 220, 232 (2d Cir. 2007) (quotation marks omitted).
The Government argues that Nissenbaum was guilty under a Pinkerton liability theory because
it was reasonably foreseeable that a coconspirator would commit tax evasion. As previously noted, the
trial defendants (including Nissenbaum) concede that they were aware of Add-On’s lack of profit
potential as of February 2003, when an e-mail exchange revealed the impact of fees on the profitability
of the transaction. See Part II.A.1.ii, ante. The Government argues that, because Nissenbaum was also
aware that the IRS was conducting depositions related to the ongoing audit of the Add-On shelter, it
was reasonably foreseeable to him that a coconspirator would commit tax evasion. The Government
does not, of course, assert the proposition that the mere fact of an ongoing IRS inquiry suggests, much
less shows, criminal intent or knowledge that the subject of the inquiry is unlawful.
The trouble with the Government’s argument is that “even Pinkerton liability . . . is premised on
a mental state.” United States v. Ferguson,
676 F.3d 260, 279 n.18 (2d Cir. 2011) (citing
Pinkerton, 328 U.S.
at 647 (“The criminal intent to do the act is established by the formation of the conspiracy.”)). In other
32
words, although Pinkerton may permit a broader scope of liability for established coconspirators, the
doctrine does not dilute or erode the basic requirement that “the person charged with conspiracy knew
of the existence of the scheme alleged in the indictment and knowingly joined and participated in it.”
Rodriguez, 392 F.3d at 545 (emphasis added) (quotation marks omitted). The Government’s only
attempt to identify an affirmative act by Nissenbaum that would demonstrate the requisite criminal
intent is the three-line March 2000 e-mail. That is simply not enough.
iii. False Statements Objective
As previously noted, see Part II.A.1.iii, ante, the false statements objective of the § 371
conspiracy was clearly directed to the conduct charged in Counts Six and Seven. The Government
does not contend that Nissenbaum was aware of or involved in the false statements to the IRS during
the Coplan and Vaughn depositions. There was no separate substantive false statements charge against
Nissenbaum in connection with his own deposition.
iv. The Conspiracy “As a Whole”
Having examined the evidence against Nissenbaum with respect to each of the three objectives
of the § 371 conspiracy charged in Count One, we turn again to the task of “looking at [the conspiracy]
as a whole.” Cont’l Ore
Co., 370 U.S. at 699. Once again, our review of the record and the arguments of
counsel compels the conclusion that the evidence against Nissenbaum is insufficient to support his
conviction on Count One. Viewed in the light most favorable to the Government, the evidence with
respect to Nissenbaum’s intent “gives equal or nearly equal circumstantial support to a theory of guilt
and a theory of innocence.” United States v. Glenn,
312 F.3d 58, 70 (2d Cir. 2002) (internal quotation
marks omitted). Under these circumstances, “a reasonable jury must necessarily entertain a reasonable
doubt.”
Id. (quotation marks omitted). Accordingly, we conclude that Nissenbaum’s conviction on
Count One must be reversed.
33
B. Sufficiency of the Evidence Supporting Counts Two and Three
Defendants Shapiro and Nissenbaum also challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support
their convictions on Counts Two and Three, which charged all the trial defendants with tax evasion in
violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201. To prove a violation of § 7201, the Government must establish beyond
a reasonable doubt (1) a substantial tax deficiency; (2) willfulness, meaning the intentional violation of a
known legal duty; and (3) an affirmative act “with the intent to evade or defeat a tax or payment of it.”
United States v. Romano,
938 F.2d 1569, 1571 (2d Cir. 1991). We have already reviewed the evidence
supporting the tax evasion liability of both Shapiro and Nissenbaum in connection with the foregoing
discussion of the tax evasion conspiracy objective. See Part II.B.1.ii, II.B.2.ii, ante. For substantially the
reasons that compel reversal as to Count One,28 we conclude that the convictions of Shapiro and
Nissenbaum on Counts Two and Three must be reversed.29
C. Sufficiency of the Evidence Supporting Count Four
Finally, Nissenbaum challenges the sufficiency of the evidence on Count Four, which charged
him with obstruction of the IRS in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7212(a). As previously noted, § 7212(a)
prohibits conduct by which a defendant “corruptly or by force or threats of force . . . obstructs or
impedes, or endeavors to obstruct or impede, the due administration of [the internal revenue code].”
26 U.S.C. § 7212(a). “The key words in [§] 7212(a) are ‘corruptly’ and ‘endeavors.’” United States v.
28In her partial dissenting opinion, Judge Kearse suggests that Shapiro and Nissenbaum could be convicted on Counts 2
and 3 under Pinkerton. We disagree because, as noted above, there is insufficient evidence that Shapiro or Nissenbaum
“knew of the existence of the scheme alleged in the indictment and knowingly joined and participated in it.”
Rodriguez, 392
F.3d at 545 (quotation marks omitted).
29In her partial dissent, Judge Kearse reaches the opposite conclusion with regard to Shapiro’s and Nissenbaum’s
convictions on Counts 1-3. In response, we simply note that sufficiency challenges are highly fact-specific inquiries that
require a careful examination of the record. See, e.g., Ospina v. Trans World Airlines, Inc.,
975 F.2d 35, 37 (2d Cir. 1992)
(“[T]his case turns on whether plaintiffs introduced sufficient evidence to support the jury’s verdict . . . a necessarily fact-
specific inquiry.”). For the reasons stated above, our close review of the record leads us to the conclusion that “the
evidence presented at trial fell considerably more than ‘a trifle short’; but even a trifle short is insufficient.” United States v.
Muniz,
60 F.3d 65, 73 (2d Cir. 1995) (Kearse, J., dissenting).
34
Kelly,
147 F.3d 172, 176 (2d Cir. 1998). The District Court instructed the jury as follows:
To act corruptly means to act with the intent to secure an unlawful advantage or
benefit either for oneself or for another. Acting corruptly requires consciousness of
wrongdoing.
A VI: 428/6193–94. Although we have previously declined to read a willfulness requirement into
§ 7212(a), we have held that a substantially similar jury instruction was “as comprehensive and accurate
as if the word ‘willfully’ was incorporated in the statute.”
Kelly, 147 F.3d at 177.
Here, the Government argues that Nissenbaum violated § 7212(a) by causing false and
misleading statements to be submitted to the IRS in response to an IRS Information Document
Request (“IDR”) regarding the Tradehill tax shelter. The evidence with respect to Count Four
principally turns on the implications of the testimony of two E&Y partners who participated in the
Tradehill transaction, Jacob Blank and Martin Flashner, and who testified at trial pursuant to immunity
orders. Count Four originally alleged that the IDR contained four false statements:
(1) Profit motivation. The first allegedly false statement in the IDR response was that the E&Y
partners had entered into the Tradehill transaction in order to generate profits. After Nissenbaum’s
counsel made a Rule 29 motion on Count Four, the Government agreed to withdraw the allegation that
this statement was “false and misleading” and to redact the Indictment accordingly.
(2) Euro exposure. The second allegedly false statement in the IDR response, as summarized in
the Redacted Indictment, was that “the Tradehill transaction was intended fully to hedge the partners’
exposure to fluctuation in the euro.” The Redacted Indictment alleged that this statement was false
because “in reality, the transaction had no capacity to do so.” A I: 106.
The statement at issue appeared in response to the first question in the IDR questionnaire:
“Describe all of your reasons and/or objectives for entering into the Transaction. For each reason
and/or objective, were these reasons and/or objectives achieved?” The IDR response letter, which
35
was submitted and signed by Proskauer Rose LLP (“Proskauer”) attorney Abraham Gutwein
(“Gutwein”), included a ten-paragraph answer to question one. Among those ten paragraphs, the
Government primarily quarrels with the following passage:
Partly in order to hedge his exposure to the euro and to offset the losses
sustained to date with respect to his Cap Gemini holdings, the taxpayer
entered into the option transactions on November 1, 2000.
Under the currency option positions purchased and sold, the taxpayer would
stand the potential of a substantial profit if the euro continued to decline in
value relative to the dollar (as had been the prevailing trend) at the option
exercise dates. . . . In that manner the taxpayer intended to fully hedge his
exposure to fluctuation in the value of the euro.
SA 812.
The Government argues that the direct examination of Blank and Flashner, the principal
witnesses with respect to Count Four, conclusively established that they did not enter the Tradehill
transaction in order to hedge against exposure to the euro. We disagree. Blank’s testimony, for
example―both on cross-examination and redirect examination―showed that his tax-minimization
purpose was not the only objective of the Tradehill transaction. On direct examination, Blank testified
as follows:
Q: Did you enter into the transaction in order to hedge your exposure to the euro?
A: No, I did not.
....
Q: Why then was it not your purpose to hedge the euro?
A: The purpose of entering into the transaction was really to generate the loss. That
was the real reason . . . I made my investment. The fact that foreign currency
options were used, there was an exposure, . . . it certainly was a factor or a competing
factor that we were able to focus on, but . . . foreign currency exposure was not the
reason we entered into the deal. The reason was to get the tax loss.
....
36
Q: What, if any, understanding did you have at the time of the transaction about how
much of a hedge this transaction could provide?
A: I had none.
Q: What, if any, discussions did you have with other members of the transaction
about how much of a hedge this transaction could provide?
A: None.
....
Q: This [IDR response] says: In that manner the taxpayer intended to fully hedge his
exposure to fluctuation in the value of the euro, is that statement true?
A: It’s not correct.
A II: 588/3037–38. But on cross examination, Blank equivocated by acknowledging that hedging
against fluctuations in the euro was “an objective,” as follows:
Q. I’m not asking you your primary objective, sir. I’m asking you [whether] an
objective of entering into th[e] [Tradehill] transaction was to hedge the currency? An
objective.
THE COURT. Yes or no. Can you answer it?
Q. At that time.
A. At that time, yes.
....
Q. The [IDR] question did not ask you what your primary objective was, did it?
A. That is correct.
....
Q. So the three objectives that the participants had were to hedge against the
currency, were to make money, and the obvious, tax motive. That’s why everybody
is doing this, is that correct, sir?
....
A. Yes.
37
A II: 609/3121–23. And on redirect examination, the Government harked back to Blank’s testimony
that because the Cap Gemini stock he had received “was not denominated in dollars” but rather “was
denominated in a foreign currency, . . . the justification for entering into the transaction from a business
perspective was to be able to, in effect, hedge and try to reduce the risk associated with owning non-
U.S. dollar denominated investments.” A II: 570/2966–67. It sought clarification:
Q. On direct examination you said that hedging the euro was a justification for the
transaction. Do you remember using that word?
A. Yes, sir, I do.
Q. What did you mean by that?
A. At the time we entered into the transaction, I was desirous of assuring that there
was a business purpose for the transaction, and at that time I did have the foreign
currency exposure, because, again, the stock that we were awarded in the sale was
not denominated in dollars, it was in foreign currency, and to the extent that the
transaction we entered offered, to the best of my knowledge at the time, the
possibility of trying to mitigate or hedge some of the risk associated with the dollar
going up or the dollar going down, that to me at that time, based on what I
understood then, represented a business purpose for entering into this transaction.
Q. Was it the reason you entered into the transaction?
A. It was not the primary reason.
A II: 618/3156.
The record reflects a similar tension with respect to Flashner, who testified on direct
examination that he did not enter the Tradehill transaction in order to hedge his exposure to the euro,
A III: 24/3395, but admitted on cross examination that the E&Y partners discussed the “exchange rate
risk” presented by their receipt of stock denominated in euros, A III: 32/3424. Flashner further
testified that “it would make sense” to protect his investment “by trying to make some money from
this downward movement of the euro against the dollar.” A III: 33/3430–31. Finally, Flashner
38
admitted that his goals in investing in Tradehill were “two-fold”: to obtain tax losses and “to earn a
profit from the transaction.” A III: 24/3394.
Faced with obvious internal tension within the testimony of its two principal witnesses on
Count Four, the Government avers that “the jury was entitled to rely on the direct examination.”
Gov’t’s Br. 185–86. But even if the jury fully credited the direct examination, as we must assume here,
that testimony lends implicit support to Nissenbaum’s defense as well. As noted above, Blank’s direct
testimony was that “[t]he purpose of entering into the transaction was really to generate the loss. That
was the real reason . . . I made my investment. The fact that foreign currency options were used, there
was exposure . . . it certainly was a factor or a competing factor that we were able to focus on, but . . .
foreign currency exposure was not the reason we entered into the deal.” A II: 588/3037. The
straightforward implication of Blank’s testimony is that hedging against fluctuations in the euro was not
the primary reason for entering the Tradehill transaction. But that was not the question posed by the
IDR. Question number one prompted the taxpayer to “[d]escribe all of your reasons and/or objectives
for entering the Transaction.” Blank’s statement—in the same sentence excerpted by the
Government—that foreign currency exposure “certainly was a factor” appears consistent with the
statement in the IDR response that the transaction was entered “[p]artly in order to hedge.” SA 812
(emphasis added).
(3) Non-written understandings. The third allegedly false statement in the IDR response was that
“[t]here were no non-written understandings” among the participants in the Tradehill transaction. .
The Redacted Indictment alleged that this statement was false because “in reality, there was an
understanding among all the parties to the transaction that the E&Y partners would exit their option
positions before the end of 2000, in order to claim tax losses they could use to offset their . . .
income.” A I: 106.
39
There was no affirmative testimony about the existence of “non-written understandings”
among the Tradehill participants. In fact, both Blank and Flashner denied engaging in discussions with
any other E&Y partner about exiting their option positions. A II: 578/ 2997, 579/3000, 580/3005
(Blank); A III: 23/3389 (Flashner). Nevertheless, the Government insists that the “entire thrust” of
their testimony was that the partners were entering the Tradehill transaction to generate a tax loss for
the same tax year, and would take the steps necessary to that end.
Even assuming arguendo that the Government is correct about the “thrust” of the testimony, a
more fundamental defect in this allegation remains: the Tradehill participants retained Gutwein—not
Nissenbaum—to represent them with regard to the IRS audit. Gutwein, who had powers of attorney
from the Tradehill participants, substantially revised a response that Nissenbaum proposed about
“understandings” among the E&Y partners. In a draft IDR response, Nissenbaum noted that “[a]ny
‘understandings’ involved the purchase and contribution of the options, the creation of the various
entities and the sale of the assets that generated the losses.” A V: 130. Gutwein then revised the
response to state that “[t]here were no non-written understandings between the [Tradehill
participants].” Thus, it appears that the language suggested by Nissenbaum was more accurate than the
language of the final IDR response.
(4) Future referral of business. The final allegedly false statement in the IDR response was that
there was no expectation or referral of any future business to Proskauer, “when in reality, in 2001, the
defendants referred PICO clients to [Proskauer] for opinion letters.” The Government relies on the
fact that about the time Proskauer was completing the legal opinions for the Tradehill shelter, it was
given the paid work of writing PICO opinions, which had to that point been prepared by Arnold &
Porter. Based on the timing, the Government argues that the jury was free to conclude that there was
indeed an “expectation or referral” of future business, rendering the IDR statement to the contrary
40
false and misleading. But Blank and Flashner did not testify to any expectation or referral of future
business to Proskauer. In the absence of any affirmative proof, we are left only with the “speculation
and surmise” that such an expectation existed. Langston v. Smith,
630 F.3d 310, 314 (2d Cir. 2011) (“[A]
conviction based on speculation and surmise alone cannot stand . . . .”) (quotation marks omitted).
Having reviewed the record and the arguments of counsel, we conclude that the record
compels reversal of Nissenbaum’s conviction on Count Four. Given the equivocal testimony by Blank
and Flashner and the role of Gutwein in drafting the IDR response, “a reasonable jury must necessarily
entertain a reasonable doubt” as to whether Nissenbaum corruptly obstructed or impeded the IRS.
Glenn, 312 F.3d at 70 (quotation marks omitted).30
III. Propriety of Venue for Count Six,
Charging Vaughn with False Statements to the IRS
Defendant Vaughn challenges the propriety of venue for Count Six, charging him with making
false statements to the IRS during a June 12, 2002 deposition in Nashville, Tennessee, in violation of 18
U.S.C. § 1001.
A. Legal Standard
Because “[p]roper venue in criminal proceedings was a matter of concern to the Nation’s
founders,” the United States Constitution “twice safeguards the defendant’s venue right.” United States
v. Cabrales,
524 U.S. 1, 6 (1998). Article III requires that “the Trial of all Crimes . . . shall be held in the
State where the said Crimes shall have been committed.” U.S. Const. art. III, § 2, cl. 3. The Sixth
Amendment further provides that “[i]n all criminal prosecutions, the accused shall enjoy the right to a
speedy and public trial, by an impartial jury of the State and district wherein the crime shall have been
30It bears underscoring the fact that Judge Kearse agrees with our reversal of Nissenbaum’s conviction on Count Four on
sufficiency grounds.
41
committed.”
Id. amend VI;31 see also Fed. R. Crim. P. 18 (requiring that “the government must
prosecute an offense in a district where the offense was committed”).
When the relevant federal statute does not specify how to determine the location where the
crime was “committed,” “[t]he locus delicti must be determined from the nature of the crime alleged and
the location of the act or acts constituting it.” Cabrales, 524 U.S. at 6–7. In conducting this inquiry, we
“must initially identify the conduct constituting the offense . . . and then discern the location of the
commission of the criminal acts.” United States v. Rodriguez-Moreno,
526 U.S. 275, 279 (1999). “Venue is
proper only where the acts constituting the offense—the crime’s ‘essential conduct elements’—took
place.” United States v. Tzolov,
642 F.3d 314, 318 (2d Cir. 2011) (quoting
Rodriguez-Moreno, 526 U.S. at
280).
“When a crime consists of a single, non-continuing act, the proper venue is clear: The crime is
‘committed’ in the district where the act is performed.” United States v. Ramirez,
420 F.3d 134, 139 (2d
Cir. 2005) (other internal quotation marks omitted). In other cases, “where the acts constituting the
crime and the nature of the crime charged implicate more than one location, the Constitution does not
command a single exclusive venue.” United States v. Magassouba,
619 F.3d 202, 205 (2d Cir. 2010)
(internal quotation marks and alterations omitted). Congress has codified the so-called “continuing
offense” rule in 18 U.S.C. § 3237(a), which provides in relevant part:
Except as otherwise expressly provided by enactment of Congress, any offense
against the United States begun in one district and completed in another, or
committed in more than one district, may be . . . prosecuted in any district in which
such offense was begun, continued, or completed.
The Government bears the burden of proving that venue is proper.
Tzolov, 642 F.3d at 318.
“[T]he venue requirement, despite its constitutional pedigree, is not an element of a crime so as to
require proof beyond a reasonable doubt; rather, venue need be proved only by a preponderance of the
31 “Technically, Article III specifies ‘venue’ and the Sixth Amendment specifies ‘vicinage,’ but that refined distinction is no
42
evidence.” United States v. Rommy,
506 F.3d 108, 119 (2d Cir. 2007) (emphasis and internal quotation
marks omitted). The propriety of venue is a question of law that we review de novo. United States v.
Drachenberg,
623 F.3d 122, 124 (2d Cir. 2010).
The federal false statements statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a), makes it a crime, inter alia, “in any
matter within the jurisdiction of the executive, legislative, or judicial branch of the Government of the
United States, knowingly and willfully . . . [to] make[ ] any materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent
statement or representation.” 18 U.S.C. § 1001(a)(2).
We have considered the issue of venue for a § 1001(a) violation on two prior occasions. In
United States v. Candella,
487 F.2d 1223 (2d Cir. 1973), a case arising in the Southern District of New
York, the defendants were charged with making false statements based on fraudulent affidavits that
were submitted to a municipal branch office in Brooklyn and then conveyed to the Housing and Urban
Development office in Manhattan.
Id. at 1227. We held that, although the crime began in the Eastern
District of New York, “it does not follow that the crime then terminated, and that what transpired in
Manhattan was irrelevant for venue purposes.”
Id. at 1228. In United States v. Ramirez,
420 F.3d 134 (2d
Cir. 2005), we elaborated upon the reasoning of Candella, holding that, where a false statement was
made in one jurisdiction and then transmitted to another, venue was proper in both jurisdictions.
Id. at
143 (holding that venue was proper in the Southern District of New York because the “‘statements
continued to be false and continued to be in the jurisdiction of the United States’ when they finally
reached Manhattan” (quoting
Candella, 487 F.2d at 1228)).32
longer of practical importance.” United States v. Royer,
549 F.3d 886, 893 n.8 (2d Cir. 2008).
32 Vaughn seeks to distinguish Candella and Ramirez because both cases involved written false statements in violation of §
1001(a)(3), rather than oral false statements in violation of § 1001(a)(2). To that end, Vaughn contrasts the text of §
1001(a)(3), which prohibits the “mak[ing] or us[ing]” of a written false statement, with the text of § 1001(a)(2), which
prohibits only the “mak[ing]” of an oral false statement. But Candella and Ramirez did not rely upon the subsequent “use”
of the false statements in order to find that venue was properly laid. Moreover, we find no indication in the text of §
1001(a) that subsection (a)(2) is to be treated differently than subsection (a)(3) for purposes of venue.
43
B. Venue for Count Six
Vaughn contends that venue for Count Six was improper because his statements were both
made and received during the IRS deposition in Nashville. For that reason, Vaughn argues, the
subsequent review and analysis of his statements by IRS officials in Manhattan afforded no basis for
venue in the Southern District of New York. We disagree.
We begin by identifying the “essential conduct elements” of § 1001(a)(2).
Rodriguez-Moreno, 526
U.S. at 280. In United States v. Ali,
68 F.3d 1468 (2d Cir. 1995), amended on denial of reh’g,
86 F.3d 275 (2d
Cir. 1996), we held for the first time that materiality is a statutory element of all charges under § 1001.
Ali, 68 F.3d at 1474–75; see United States v. Mandanici,
205 F.3d 519, 523 (2d Cir. 2000). Thus, in order
to secure a conviction under § 1001(a)(2), the Government must prove that a defendant (1) knowingly
and willfully, (2) made a materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement, (3) in relation to a matter
within the jurisdiction of a department or agency of the United States, (4) with knowledge that it was
false or fictitious or fraudulent.33
But not all statutory elements constitute “essential conduct elements” within the meaning of
Rodriguez-Moreno. In reviewing the elements of § 1001, the Supreme Court has noted that the statutory
requirement that the false statement be made “in any matter within the jurisdiction . . . of the United
States” is “jurisdictional language [that] appears in a phrase separate from the prohibited conduct” and
is simply a “predicate circumstance” of the offense. United States v. Yermian,
468 U.S. 63, 68–69 (1984)
(quotation marks omitted). Similarly, the mens rea requirement constitutes “a circumstance element that
does not contribute to determining the locus delicti of the crime.” United States v. Oceanpro Indus., Ltd., 674
33 Since Ali, we have occasionally stated the elements of a § 1001 false statements charge without mentioning the materiality
element. See, e.g., United States v. Wiener,
96 F.3d 35, 37 (2d Cir. 1996) (“To convict a defendant of violating Section 1001,
the government must prove that the defendant: (i) knowingly and willfully, (ii) made a statement, (iii) in relation to a matter
within the jurisdiction of a department or agency of the United States, (iv) with knowledge that it was false or fictitious and
fraudulent.”). In light of our explicit holding that “materiality is indeed an element of the offense,”
Ali, 68 F.3d at 1475,
our subsequent failure to incorporate materiality into our standard recitation of the statutory elements of § 1001 appears to
be the result of a simple oversight.
44
F.3d 323, 329 (4th Cir. 2012).34 Thus, the essential conduct prohibited by § 1001(a)(2) is the making of
a materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement.
In this case, the materiality requirement proves dispositive with respect to venue. “Under
§ 1001, a statement is material if it has a natural tendency to influence, or be capable of influencing, the
decision of the decisionmaking body to which it was addressed, or if it is capable of distracting
government investigators’ attention away from a critical matter.” United States v. Adekanbi,
675 F.3d
178, 182 (2d Cir. 2012) (internal citations, quotation marks, and alterations omitted). Accordingly,
whether Vaughn’s false statements were material turns on the tendency or capacity of those statements
to influence the decisionmaking body at issue—in this case, the IRS.
Proving the materiality of Vaughn’s false statements in Tennessee necessarily requires evidence
that those statements were conveyed to or had an effect on the IRS investigators working in the
Southern District of New York.
Oceanpro, 674 F.3d at 329; see United States v. Salinas,
373 F.3d 161, 167
(1st Cir. 2004) (“When materiality is a critical component of the statutory definition, it makes perfect
sense to consider the crime as continuing into the district in which the effects of the false statement are
felt.”); United States v. Ringer,
300 F.3d 788, 792 (7th Cir. 2002) (finding venue in the district where the
investigation was “reasonably likely to be affected by [the defendant’s] statements”); but see United States
v. Smith,
641 F.3d 1200, 1208 (10th Cir. 2011) (finding venue, where false statement was not recorded,
only in the jurisdiction where the false statement was made). We therefore conclude that venue for
34 Cf. United States v. Clenney,
434 F.3d 780, 782 (5th Cir. 2005) (holding that the intent element of the parental kidnapping
statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1204, “merely speaks to the offender’s mens rea as he commits the conduct essential to the crime; it is
plainly not an ‘essential conduct element’ as required by Rodriguez-Moreno”);
Ramirez, 420 F.3d at 144 (“While a scheme to
defraud is certainly one of three essential elements of mail fraud, it is not an essential conduct element. . . . It is the mens rea
element of mail fraud.”); United States v. Bowens,
224 F.3d 302, 313 (4th Cir. 2000) (holding that language “defin[ing] the
requisite intent for the offense” of harboring a fugitive, 18 U.S.C. § 1071, was not an essential conduct element).
45
Count Six was proper in the Southern District of New York.35
This result is fully consistent with our holdings in Candella and Ramirez. It is undisputed that
Vaughn “ma[de]” the false statements at issue during the IRS deposition in Nashville—but “it does not
follow that the crime then terminated, and that what transpired in Manhattan was irrelevant for venue
purposes.”
Candella, 487 F.2d at 1228. In Ramirez, the offense began in New Jersey, where the
fraudulent paperwork was filed, and ended in the Southern District of New York, the jurisdiction to
which New Jersey officials forwarded the paperwork.
Ramirez, 420 F.3d at 137–38. Similarly, the
instant offense case began in Tennessee, where Vaughn made the false statements to IRS officials, but
continued into the Southern District of New York, where his deposition transcript was reviewed and
discussed by IRS officials in connection with the ongoing E&Y audit. The fact that Vaughn’s
statements “‘continued to be false and continued to be in the jurisdiction of the United States when
they finally reached Manhattan,’”
Ramirez, 420 F.3d at 143 (quoting
Candella, 487 F.2d at 1228)),
confirms our view that venue was proper in the Southern District of New York.
On occasion, we have supplemented our venue inquiry with a “substantial contacts” test that
“takes into account a number of factors—the site of the defendant’s acts, the elements and nature of
the crime, the locus of the effect of the criminal conduct, and the suitability of each district for accurate
factfinding.” United States v. Reed,
773 F.2d 477, 481 (2d Cir. 1985). Since Reed, we have alternately
applied and ignored the substantial contacts test. Compare United States v. Royer,
549 F.3d 886, 893 (2d
Cir. 2008) (citing Reed with approval); United States v. Saavedra,
223 F.3d 85, 92–93 (2d Cir. 2000) (same);
with United States v. Tzolov,
642 F.3d 314, 321 (2d Cir. 2011) (“Though Reed refers to a ‘substantial
contacts rule’ for determining venue . . . it is clear that the [court] regarded the locale of the defendant’s
35Vaughn similarly argues that the grand jury lacked jurisdiction to return Count 6 of the Superseding Indictment because
the offense was committed outside the district where the jury was impaneled. This challenge fails for substantially the same
reasons as his venue challenge. See Part III.C, ante.
46
acts as a sufficient basis for establishing venue.” (alteration in original) (other internal quotation marks
omitted)).
We have previously held, and we now clarify, that use of the substantial contacts test may be
appropriate where, as here, the defendant “argue[s] that his prosecution in the [contested district] . . .
[will] result[ ] in a hardship to him, prejudice[ ] him, or undermine[ ] the fairness of his trial.” United
States v. Magassouba,
619 F.3d 202, 205 n.2 (2d Cir. 2010). We think the District Court in this case
proceeded with the required care by considering the factors enumerated in Reed and Saavedra before
concluding that “the substantial contacts analysis weighs in favor of venue in this district.” Vaughn
does not appear to challenge the substance of that determination on appeal.
IV. Admission of Graham Taylor Testimony
In addition to their validity, sufficiency, and jurisdictional challenges, the trial defendants also
mount a variety of evidentiary challenges. In the first of these, they argue that the District Court erred
in admitting the testimony of Graham Taylor, a tax attorney who worked at the law firm of Pillsbury
Madison and who indisputably committed a variety of crimes involving tax shelters unrelated to this
case. We review the District Court’s rulings regarding the admissibility of evidence at trial for abuse of
discretion. United States v. Williams,
585 F.3d 703, 707 (2d Cir. 2009); cf. In re Sims,
534 F.3d 117, 132 (2d
Cir. 2008) (explaining that the term of art “abuse of discretion” includes errors of law).
In 1999, Taylor had a series of discussions about the CDS transaction with E&Y partner David
Smith, the defendant in this action who was a fugitive at the time of trial. Taylor drafted an initial
opinion letter regarding the CDS transaction, and Smith eventually brought the transaction and the
draft opinion letter to E&Y. Taylor’s draft opinion letter contained a variety of statements regarding
the CDS transaction that he knew were false, including statements that (1) the purpose of the
partnership was investment profit; (2) the investors would have money at risk; and (3) that early
47
termination of the swap was not predetermined. Taylor testified that he and Smith had agreed that
these core elements of the transaction could not be disclosed in the opinion letter if the transaction
were to yield the intended tax benefits. Other than a brief phone call with two unknown E&Y
employees in June 1999, Taylor had no contact with anyone else at E&Y. E&Y ultimately engaged
Brent Clifton at Locke Liddell rather than Taylor to write the CDS opinion letter.
The defendants moved to exclude Taylor’s testimony prior to trial, arguing that his testimony
would consist primarily of recounting his conversations with Smith. The defendants argued that, since
there was no evidence that the substance of those conversations had been relayed to the defendants,
Taylor’s testimony was not relevant. The Government conceded that it would not produce direct
“evidence that Taylor communicated directly with anyone at E&Y regarding what was falsely stated in,
or intentionally omitted from, his draft opinion,” but argued that a jury could infer that “those matters
necessarily would have been conveyed by Smith to one or more of the defendants.” The District Court
denied the defendants’ motion and allowed the Government to present Taylor’s testimony, while
warning that the Government would be required to “connect up” the evidence.
On appeal, the defendants principally argue that by admitting Taylor’s testimony, the District
Court misunderstood its obligations under Federal Rule of Evidence 104(b), which governs questions
of conditional relevance. Rule 104(b) provides that “[w]hen the relevance of evidence depends on
whether a fact exists, proof must be introduced sufficient to support a finding that the fact does exist.
The court may admit the proposed evidence on the condition that the proof be introduced later.” Fed
R. Evid. 104(b). When faced with a question of conditional relevance, the district court should
“examine[ ] all the evidence in the case and decide[ ] whether the jury could reasonably find the
conditional fact . . . by a preponderance of the evidence.” Huddleston v. United States,
485 U.S. 681, 690
(1988). In this case, the defendants argue that the relevance of Taylor’s testimony depended upon a
48
preliminary “conditional fact”—that the conversations between Taylor and Smith were ultimately
conveyed to the defendants. In the absence of evidence that Taylor had substantive conversations with
anyone else at E&Y, or that Smith told anyone at E&Y about his conversations with Taylor, the
defendants argue that the Government failed to carry its burden to prove the conditional fact by a
preponderance.
Despite the Government’s apparent failure to confront the Rule 104(b) analysis on appeal, we
are persuaded that Taylor’s testimony was admissible as direct evidence of the conspiracy. As a
preliminary matter, we note that the draft opinion letter prepared by Taylor and the final opinion letter
issued by Locke Liddell were substantially similar, and that some passages appeared to be copied nearly
verbatim. Indeed, even the defendants acknowledge that “it was certainly reasonable to conclude that
Locke Liddell had received a copy of Taylor’s letter, and that it had used the letter as a starting point
for its own.” Thus, Taylor’s testimony about the content of the draft opinion letter was independently
admissible as to the circumstances manifesting the formation of the conspiracy.
Taylor’s testimony about his conversations with Smith admittedly presents a closer question of
conditional relevance. Taylor testified at length about the various facts about the CDS transaction that
had to be omitted from the tax opinion or described in misleading terms. As the Government notes,
“what is striking about Taylor’s concerns is that they are precisely the same facts that the defendants, in
e-mail after e-mail, cautioned people against revealing to the IRS.” Based on these similarities, the
District Court concluded that a reasonable jury could infer that Taylor’s concerns were passed on to the
defendants. In the circumstances presented here, we agree. Although the defendants protest that there
is no evidence that Taylor communicated directly with the defendants, we have never required a
statement to be disseminated to each member of the conspiracy in order to be admissible against the
whole. Cf. United States v. Friedman,
854 F.2d 535, 562 (2d Cir. 1988) (“[T]here is no requirement that
49
each member of a conspiracy conspire directly with every other member of the conspiracy.”).
Accordingly, we affirm the District Court’s decision to admit Taylor’s testimony.
V. Admission of Coconspirator Statements
Defendant Vaughn, in an argument joined by each of the trial defendants, argues that the
District Court committed reversible error by admitting the out-of-court statements of more than 20
alleged coconspirators. Federal Rule of Evidence 801 provides that a statement is not hearsay if it is
both offered against a party and is “made by the party’s coconspirator during and in furtherance of the
conspiracy.” Fed. R. Evid. 801(d)(2)(E). To admit hearsay testimony under Rule 801(d)(2)(E), the
district court “must find (a) that there was a conspiracy, (b) that its members included the declarant and
the party against whom the statement is offered [(the “non-offering party”)], and (c) that the statement
was made during the course of and in furtherance of the conspiracy.” United States v. Alameh,
341 F.3d
167, 176 (2d Cir. 2003) (quotation marks omitted). These are “preliminary questions of fact” to be
resolved by the district court under a preponderance of the evidence standard. Bourjaily v. United States,
483 U.S. 171, 175 (1987).
We review for clear error a district court’s findings as to whether “there was a conspiracy
involving the declarant and the nonoffering party, and [whether] the statement was made during the
course and in furtherance of the conspiracy.” In re Terrorist Bombings of U.S. Embassies in E. Africa,
552
F.3d 93, 137 (2d Cir. 2008) (quotation marks omitted) (alteration in original). As previously noted, we
review a district court’s determination as to the admissibility of evidence at trial for abuse of discretion.
Williams, 585 F.3d at 707.
Prior to trial, the Government identified 50 people as coconspirators with the defendants,
including central figures such as David Smith, Peter Cinquegrani, and Belle Six. When the
Government offered out-of-court statements of the alleged coconspirators at trial, the defense objected
50
that the Government had not carried its burden as to the elements of the coconspirator exception. The
District Court admitted the evidence subject to connection under the procedure established in Bourjaily
v. United States,
483 U.S. 171 (1987), which permits the district court to “examine the hearsay statements
sought to be admitted” in “making a preliminary factual determination.”
Id. at 181. At the close of the
Government’s case, the defense filed a motion to strike the out-of-court statements of the alleged
coconspirators. After holding oral argument on the motion and requesting copies of certain exhibits
for additional review, the District Court made a blanket ruling that “the prerequisites of Rule
801(d)(2)(E) have been shown by a preponderance of the evidence with respect to each of the
conditionally admitted statements.”
The defendants argue on appeal that the District Court’s blanket admission of the
coconspirator statements transgresses the “limit[s] [on] the proper use of Rule 801(d)(2)(E) to admit
coconspirator testimony.” United States v. Gigante,
166 F.3d 75, 82 (2d Cir. 1999). Specifically, Vaughn
argues that, as to most or all of the alleged coconspirators, the Government failed to prove that they
had the intent to join and further an illegal venture. See
id. at 83 (“It is the unity of interests stemming
from a specific shared criminal task that justifies Rule 801(d)(2)(E) in the first place . . . .”). For
example, the defendants argue that two outside accountants, Fred Goldman and Robert Cooper, were
“merely outside functionaries” and “cannot be considered ‘co-conspirators’ with the defendants under
any reasonable definition of the term.”
In response, the Government accuses Vaughn of “cherry-pick[ing]” testimony to argue his case
when there was “ample evidence” to establish that Goldman, Cooper, and others were coconspirators
with the defendants. In particular, the Government notes that Cooper acknowledged at trial that he
had given false and misleading testimony during an IRS tax audit and that he believed he was helping
clients commit tax evasion when he signed tax returns for the Add-On transaction.
51
Upon review of the foregoing arguments, it appears that the defendants’ fundamental objection
to the coconspirator evidence relates to the generalized nature of the District Court’s ruling. See
Vaughn Reply 34 (“In point of fact, it is the summary fashion by which the District Court dispensed
with these detailed, specific objections by the Defendants which forms the basis of Vaughn’s argument
concerning this point on appeal.”). Although the blanket ruling by the District Court certainly makes
appellate review more difficult, we have never required the district court to make particularized rulings
or conduct separable analyses with respect to each coconspirator, much less each coconspirator
statement. Cf. United States v. Al-Moayad,
545 F.3d 139, 173 (2d Cir. 2008) (vacating the judgment
because “[t]he court made no findings, by a preponderance of the evidence or otherwise, about the
existence of a conspiracy” (emphasis added)). The record makes clear that the able and experienced
district judge reviewed the defendants’ motion papers, held oral argument, obtained additional evidence
from the Government, applied the correct legal standard, and made a considered oral ruling. In light of
these facts, the District Court did not clearly err in its factual determination that the out-of-court
statements were made in furtherance of the conspiracy, and therefore did not abuse its discretion by
admitting the out-of-court statements under the coconspirator exception.
VI. Exclusion of Portions of Coplan and Vaughn Deposition Transcripts
Coplan and Vaughn argue that the District Court abused its discretion by excluding from
evidence portions of their deposition transcripts. As part of an IRS “promoter exam” of E&Y,36 the
IRS deposed both Coplan and Vaughn in June 2002. The deposition transcripts formed the basis for
Counts Six and Seven of the Redacted Indictment, which charged Coplan and Vaughn with making
false statements to the IRS. At trial, the Government sought to introduce only the portions of the
deposition transcripts containing the false statements alleged in Counts Six and Seven. Coplan and
36A “promoter exam” (as opposed to an “income tax exam”) aims to determine (1) whether the entity under examination is
a principal or an organizer under the tax laws, and (2) whether the underlying transactions constitute tax shelters.
52
Vaughn sought to admit their entire deposition transcripts in order to demonstrate that the statements,
even if false, were not material to the promoter exam. The District Court thereafter accepted certain
counter-designations proposed by the defendants, but refused to admit the entire transcripts, holding
that the excluded portions were “largely inadmissible hearsay offered by defendants, or they [we]re
simply irrelevant to the issues here.”
Once again, we review a district court’s determination as to the admissibility of evidence at trial
for abuse of discretion.
Williams, 585 F.3d at 707.
A. The Alleged Error
Coplan and Vaughn argue that, in excluding more than 80 percent of the deposition transcripts,
the District Court erred by (1) ruling that the bulk of the deposition transcripts constituted hearsay;
(2) failing to admit the statements under the rule of completeness; and (3) failing to admit the
statements under the state of mind exception to the hearsay rule.
1. Hearsay
Under Federal Rule of Evidence 801, a hearsay statement is an out-of-court “assertion” that is
“offer[ed] . . . to prove the truth of the matter asserted in the statement.” Fed. R. Evid. 801(a) & (c); see
United States v. Marin,
669 F.2d 73, 84 (2d Cir. 1982) (“When the defendant seeks to introduce his own
prior statement for the truth of the matter asserted, it is hearsay, and it is not admissible.”). Here,
Coplan and Vaughn challenge the District Court’s predicate ruling that the bulk of the deposition
transcripts were offered for the truth of the matter asserted. But as the Government tacitly concedes,
see Gov’t’s Br. 232, the questions posed by the IRS agent were not hearsay, because as a matter of law,
questions are not “assertions” within the meaning of Rule 801. See United States v. Oguns,
921 F.2d 442,
449 (2d Cir. 1990) (“An inquiry is not an ‘assertion,’ and accordingly is not and cannot be a hearsay
53
statement.” (quotation marks omitted)). Thus, the District Court erred by invoking the hearsay rule to
exclude the questions contained in the deposition transcripts.
The hearsay status of the defendants’ responses presents a closer question. Coplan insists that
his responses were not offered for the truth of the matter asserted, but to demonstrate “the overall
purpose of the interview, the context in which the charged statements were made, and [his] willingness
to cooperate fully in the interview.” Coplan Reply 31 n.5. The Government counters that Coplan’s
true purpose was to convince the jury that, in the course of a lengthy deposition, he was mostly
truthful. The Government’s contention finds support in a letter brief from Coplan’s counsel, which
made clear that he wished to admit the entire deposition transcript in order to show “his forthcoming
approach to the proceeding.” SA 303. In light of these facts, the District Court did not abuse its
discretion by invoking the hearsay rule to exclude the deposition responses.
2. “Rule of Completeness”
Under Federal Rule of Evidence 106, where a party introduces all or part of a recorded
statement, an adverse party may require the introduction of any other part that “in fairness ought to be
considered at the same time.” Fed. R. Evid. 106. The so-called “rule of completeness” provides that
“even though a statement may be hearsay, an omitted portion of the statement must be placed in
evidence if necessary to explain the admitted portion, to place the admitted portion in context, to avoid
misleading the jury, or to ensure fair and impartial understanding of the admitted portion.” United
States v. Kopp,
562 F.3d 141, 144 (2d Cir. 2009) (quotation marks omitted). The rule “does not,
however, require the admission of portions of a statement that are neither explanatory of nor relevant
to the admitted passages.”
Id. (quotation marks omitted).
In this case, Coplan and Vaughn argue that the District Court erred in concluding that portions
of the transcript offered under Rule 106 could still be excluded under the hearsay rule. Although the
54
Government initially misstated the standard below, Coplan identified the mistake almost immediately,
and there is no indication that the District Court misapprehended or misapplied the Rule 106 standard
in electing to admit the defendants’ counter-designations but not the entire transcripts. Citing the
relevant standard from United States v. Jackson,
180 F.3d 55, 73 (2d Cir. 1999), the District Court stated
that it was “[u]sing [Rule] 106 as a filter or a polestar” in refusing to admit the deposition transcripts in
their entirety, but admitting a number of counter-designations. We find no abuse of discretion in that
determination.
3. “State of Mind” Exception
Federal Rule of Evidence Rule 803(3) provides a hearsay exception for “[a] statement of the
declarant’s then-existing state of mind . . . or emotional, sensory, or physical condition.” Fed. R. Evid.
803(3). The defendants contend that the excluded portions of the transcript were admissible under this
“state of mind” exception. In particular, Coplan argues that a statement evincing his confusion about
the definition of a “digital option” should have been admitted “to show [his] lack of understanding of
some of the financial instruments involved.” Coplan Br. 83. But although Coplan raised Rule 803(3)
“in general terms” below, it appears that his current argument—that certain statements were admissible
to prove his lack of technical acumen—was never presented to the District Court. A III: 218/4167
(District Court ruling noting that defendants “haven’t given any specificity of statements that show
state of mind of Vaughn or Coplan”).
B. Prejudice
In any event, even assuming arguendo that the District Court erred by not admitting the entirety
of the deposition transcripts, the error was harmless. Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(a) (defining “harmless error”
as “[a]ny error, defect, irregularity, or variance that does not affect substantial rights”). The defendants
argue that the erroneous exclusion “gutted” their defense that the false statements “were, at best,
55
ancillary to the investigation.” Coplan Br. 85. But in the full context of the record, it is clear that the
defendants had ample opportunity to make these arguments through their cross-examination of the
IRS agent and their closing arguments. Moreover, the jury heard testimony explaining how all of the
information sought by the IRS was material to the promoter exam that was the subject of the
deposition. On this record, we conclude that, even if the exclusion of the deposition testimony was
erroneous, the error was harmless. See United States v. Farhane,
634 F.3d 127, 164 (2d Cir. 2011)
(deeming harmless the exclusion of state of mind evidence where Government’s contrary evidence was
“clearly overwhelming”); United States v. Song,
436 F.3d 137, 140 (2d Cir. 2006) (deeming harmless the
erroneous exclusion of state of mind evidence where defendant “was permitted to testify in sufficient
detail as to his theory of the case” and Government presented overwhelming evidence of guilt).
VII. Alleged Prosecutorial Misconduct
Shapiro, joined by Coplan and Vaughn, argues that the Government committed prosecutorial
misconduct by introducing surprise arguments and misrepresenting evidence in its rebuttal summation.
Specifically, the defendants challenge (1) the Government’s “surprise” arguments about client
responses to the PICO IDR; and (2) the Government’s description of COBRA as a “trick” and an
“amazing” and “extraordinary” distortion of the relevant tax regulations.37
As a general matter, a defendant asserting that a prosecutor’s remarks warrant a new trial “‘faces
a heavy burden, because the misconduct alleged must be so severe and significant as to result in the
denial of his right to a fair trial.’” United States v. Banki,
685 F.3d 99, 120 (2d Cir. 2012) (quoting United
States v. Locascio,
6 F.3d 924, 925 (2d Cir. 1993) (alterations omitted)); see also United States v. Whitten,
610
F.3d 168, 202 (2d Cir. 2010) (“We will reverse on the ground of prosecutorial misconduct only if that
37 Shapiro also argues that the Government’s rebuttal summation mischaracterized the record by telling the jury that
Dougherty had “told” them that “Mr. Shapiro lied about why the S corporation was needed” for the COBRA transaction.
Because we have already concluded that Shapiro’s conspiracy conviction must be reversed on sufficiency grounds, we
decline to address this argument.
56
misconduct caused substantial prejudice by so infecting the trial with unfairness as to make the
resulting conviction a denial of due process.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). “In considering
whether inappropriate remarks rise to the level of prejudicial error, we examine ‘the severity of the
misconduct, the measures adopted to cure the misconduct, and the certainty of conviction absent the
misconduct.’” United States v. Gansman,
657 F.3d 85, 96 (2d Cir. 2011) (quoting United States v. Caracappa,
614 F.3d 30, 41 (2d Cir. 2010)).
With respect to the “surprise” rebuttal argument, it is well established that “[r]ebuttal provides
the government with the opportunity to respond to defendant’s arguments. It does not allow the
government to bring in new matters.” United States v. Giovanelli,
945 F.2d 479, 495 (2d Cir. 1991)
(quotation marks omitted). In context, however, it appears that the “surprise” PICO IDR argument
was briefly discussed in the Government’s opening summation as “one of the most galling examples”
of statements prepared by the defendants that falsely described their clients’ subjective intent. The
Government then returned to the PICO IDR argument in rebuttal, highlighting the fact that none of
the defense counsel had addressed the PICO IDR responses. Returning to an argument noted—
although not emphasized—by the Government in its opening summation cannot be regarded as
“deceitful and unfair.” Shapiro Br. 83. In the context of a rebuttal summation that spanned some 120
pages of trial transcript, any misconduct here cannot be deemed severe. See United States v. Newton,
369
F.3d 659, 681 (2d Cir. 2004) (cautioning against “disproportionate emphasis [on] isolated incidents of
alleged error”).
The defendants also challenge the Government’s description of the COBRA transaction as a
“trick” and an “amazing” and “extraordinary” distortion of the relevant tax regulations. This argument
is equally unpersuasive. It is well established that the Government “has broad latitude in the inferences
it may reasonably suggest to the jury during summation.” United States v. Edwards,
342 F.3d 168, 181 (2d
57
Cir. 2003) (quotation mark omitted). In this case, the Government had presented ample evidence to
support the inference that COBRA—a shelter that, rather than deferring or converting taxes,
eliminated tax liability altogether—was based on an aggressive, although not necessarily unlawful,
interpretation of the tax code. See, e.g., A II: 364/2149 (testimony of Belle Six) (“We did look at
elimination strategies in [the VIPER Group]. The consensus was not that we wouldn’t sell them, but
that it would be very unlikely that Ernst & Young would ever reach a level of authority to sell them.”).
The Government’s comments about COBRA in rebuttal summation, “while arguably imprecise, were
by no means unreasonable in light of the evidence presented at trial and the nature of the charged . . .
scheme.” United States v. Cohen,
427 F.3d 164, 170 (2d Cir. 2005). For that reason, we find the
defendants’ assertions of prosecutorial misconduct to be without merit.
VIII. Jury Instructions
Coplan, Shapiro, and Nissenbaum argue that the District Court’s jury instructions were flawed
in three respects: (1) the instructions on Count One, the conspiracy to defraud charge, unfairly
emphasized the Government’s theory of the case and omitted their theory of defense; (2) there was no
factual basis for the conscious avoidance instruction in connection with Counts Two and Three, the tax
evasion charges; and (3) the instructions on Counts Two and Three contained an improper definition
of “economic substance.”
As a general matter, we review a properly preserved claim of error regarding jury instructions de
novo, reversing only where, “viewing the charge as a whole, there was a prejudicial error.” United States v.
Aina-Marshall,
336 F.3d 167, 170 (2d Cir. 2003). The trial court “enjoys broad discretion in crafting its
instructions[,] which is only circumscribed by the requirement that the charge be fair to both sides.”
United States v. Brand,
467 F.3d 179, 205 (2d Cir. 2006) (quotation marks omitted). A defendant
challenging a district court’s refusal to give a requested jury instruction carries the “heavy burden . . . .
58
[of showing] that his proposed charge accurately represented the law in every respect, and that the
charge actually given, viewed as a whole, prejudiced him.” United States v. Feliciano,
223 F.3d 102, 116
(2d Cir. 2000) (internal quotation marks omitted).
A. Instructions on the Defense Theory
First, the defendants argue that the jury instructions on Count One omitted their theory of
defense and unfairly emphasized the Government’s theory of guilt. Although a defendant is “entitled
to have the court charge the jury on any defense theory for which a foundation existed in the record, he
[is] not necessarily entitled to have that instruction communicated to the jury in the language of his
choice.”
Brand, 467 F.3d at 205 (quotation marks omitted) (alteration in original). “We will vacate a
conviction on account of a missing requested instruction if (1) the requested instruction was legally
correct; (2) it represents a theory of defense with basis in the record that would lead to acquittal; and (3)
the theory is not effectively presented elsewhere in the charge.” United States v. Prawl,
168 F.3d 622, 626
(2d Cir. 1999) (internal quotation marks omitted).
In this case, the defendants proposed a jury instruction on Count One that emphasized the
distinction between acts that made the IRS’s job more difficult and acts that were done deceitfully or
dishonestly. Their requested instruction included a number of examples that, in the defendants’ view,
could not constitute a conspiracy to defraud, in order to advance the defense theory that their conduct
was legitimate advocacy on behalf of their clients. See, e.g., A VI: 262 (proposed jury instruction) (“It is
not illegal simply to make the IRS’s job harder. This is particularly true for the defendants, whose
professional obligations as attorneys or certified public accountants required them to represent the
interests of their clients vigorously in their dealings with adversaries, such as the IRS.”). The District
Court adopted the substance of the proposed charge, but declined to include the defendants’ examples
59
or to inform the jury about the special obligations of tax professionals who represent clients in an
adversarial setting.38
We affirm the District Court’s ruling primarily because the defendants’ proposed charge did not
“accurately represent[ ] the law in every respect.”
Feliciano, 223 F.3d at 116 (quotation marks omitted).
The examples of purportedly lawful conduct proffered by the defendants included the following: “an
agreement between witnesses not to tell the government something unless specifically asked about it;
38 With respect to the conspiracy to defraud charge, the District Court instructed the jury as follows:
A conspiracy to defraud the United States does not necessarily involve cheating the
government out of money or property. The statute also includes conspiracies to interfere with or
obstruct any lawful government function by fraud, deceit, or any dishonest means. I instruct you that
the IRS is an agency of the United States government. The term “conspiracy to defraud the United
States” therefore means that the defendants and their alleged co-conspirators are accused of
conspiring to impede, impair, obstruct or defeat, by fraudulent or dishonest means, the lawful
functions of the IRS to ascertain taxes and to collect lawfully due and owing tax revenue.
Only conduct that both is intended to impede the lawful functions of a government agency
and is fraudulent or dishonest will support a charge of conspiracy to defraud a government agency. A
conspiracy to impede the functions of a government agency by fraudulent or dishonest means may
include such things as altering documents after they have been demanded by the government agency,
creating false documents, destroying records, making false statements, attempting to induce others to
make false statements, or engaging in any other fraudulent or deceptive conduct that would have the
effect of impairing the ability of the government agency to determine material aspects of a
transaction. By giving you these examples, ladies and gentlemen, I do not mean to suggest that these
are the only actions that could impede the IRS by fraudulent or dishonest means, nor am I expressing
any view as to whether conduct similar to these examples actually took place here. That’s for you to
decide.
Not all conduct that impedes the lawful functions of a government agency is illegal. To be
unlawful, that conduct has to entail fraud, deceit, or other dishonest means. It is not illegal simply to
make the IRS’s job harder. Only an agreement to engage in conduct that tends to impede the IRS, and also involves
fraudulent, deceitful or dishonest means, constitutes an illegal agreement to defraud the United States.
It is not necessary that the government or the IRS actually suffer a financial loss from a
scheme. A conspiracy to defraud exists when there is an agreement to impede, impair, obstruct, or
defeat, in any fraudulent or dishonest manner, the lawful functions of the IRS. One cannot use
deception or dishonest means to impede, impair, defeat, or obstruct the IRS, even to protect a
legitimate tax position.
Where, however, there is an agreement to impede, impair, obstruct, or defeat the lawful
functions of the IRS by fraudulent, deceptive, or dishonest means, the first element is satisfied
regardless of whether the means of doing so in that particular instance are or are not unlawful in and
of themselves.
That’s the first object that’s alleged here, defrauding the IRS and the United States.
A VI: 419/6157–59 (emphasis added).
60
advice from an attorney to a client to assert his constitutional right not to speak to government
investigators; an agreement not to create a document that individuals had no obligation to create.”
A VI: 262. Although these acts are not necessarily deceitful, no bright line rule excludes such acts from
supporting a conspiracy to defraud. See Cont’l Ore Co. v. Union Carbide & Carbon Corp.,
370 U.S. 690, 707
(1962) (“[I]t is well settled that acts which are in themselves legal lose that character when they become
constituent elements of an unlawful scheme.”). We are not unsympathetic to the defendants’ view that
a lay jury may struggle to fully apprehend the obligations of tax professionals zealously (and lawfully)
representing clients before the IRS. Nevertheless, because the current understanding of the Klein
doctrine does not categorically exclude the foregoing acts, the District Court properly omitted the
proposed examples from the jury instructions.
In any event, the Court’s actual instructions on Count One repeatedly emphasized the need for
the jury to find that the defendants acted in a deceitful or dishonest manner in order to convict. A VI:
419/6158 (“Only conduct that both is intended to impede the lawful functions of a government agency
and is fraudulent or dishonest will support a charge of conspiracy to defraud a government agency. . . .
Not all conduct that impedes the lawful functions of a government agency is illegal. To be unlawful,
that conduct has to entail fraud, deceit, or other dishonest means.”). “[V]iewing the charge as a whole,”
we find no prejudicial error.
Aina-Marshall, 336 F.3d at 170.
B. Conscious Avoidance Instruction
The defendants further argue that there was no factual basis for the conscious avoidance
instruction in connection with Counts Two and Three, the tax evasion charges. “‘A conscious
avoidance instruction permits a jury to find that a defendant had culpable knowledge of a fact when the
evidence shows that the defendant intentionally avoided confirming the fact.’” United States v. Quinones,
61
635 F.3d 590, 594 (2d Cir. 2011) (quoting United States v. Ferrarini,
219 F.3d 145, 154 (2d Cir. 2000)).39
A conscious avoidance instruction is appropriate only when (1) “a defendant asserts the lack of some
specific aspect of knowledge required for conviction,” and (2) “the appropriate factual predicate for the
charge exists, i.e., the evidence is such that a rational juror may reach the conclusion beyond a
reasonable doubt that the defendant was aware of a high probability of the fact in dispute and
consciously avoided confirming that fact.” United States v. Ferguson,
676 F.3d 260, 278 (2d Cir. 2011)
(quotation marks omitted). The Government need not choose between an “actual knowledge” and a
“conscious avoidance” theory. United States v. Kaplan,
490 F.3d 110, 128 n.7 (2d Cir. 2007).
In this case, the Government requested a conscious avoidance instruction in connection with
the scienter element of Counts Two and Three, the tax evasion charges. The defense objected that
there was no factual predicate for the conscious avoidance instruction; the District Court overruled the
objection, finding unspecified “adequate evidence” to support the charge. The jury was instructed that
the knowledge element would be satisfied if a defendant “was aware of a high probability that a CDS
add-on shelter transaction lacked a reasonable possibility of a profit” and “acted with a conscious
purpose to avoid learning the truth about whether or not the shelter had a reasonable possibility of a
profit.”
With respect to Coplan, we conclude that the conscious avoidance instruction was clearly
justified. In February 2001, Coplan reviewed and commented on a spreadsheet he received from Belle
Six that listed the Add-On clients and provided basic information about each client. That spreadsheet
reflected the cost of the client’s investment and the maximum potential payout ratio for the
investment—two of three data points necessary to evaluate profit potential. Specifically, the
39 We have recently noted that “[t]he Supreme Court appears to now prefer the appellation ‘willful blindness.’” United States
v. Ferguson,
676 F.3d 260, 278 n.16 (2d Cir. 2011) (quoting Global–Tech Appliances, Inc. v. SEB S.A.,
131 S. Ct. 2060, 2070 &
n.9 (2011)). Because the parties used the term “conscious avoidance” below, we continue to use that term for purposes of
this case.
62
spreadsheet showed that the investment for each taxpayer cost approximately 0.5% of the desired tax
loss, and that the maximum payout ratio for each taxpayer was approximately 2:1 (profit to premium).
See note 25, ante (describing the 2:1 payoff ratio). From these two variables, it was apparent that Add-
On lacked profit potential if the fees exceeded 1.0%. Given Coplan’s role as the head of SISG and his
involvement in setting the Add-On fees, there was sufficient evidence to allow the jury to conclude
that, if Coplan did not have actual knowledge that the fees exceeded 1.0%, he “decided not to learn th[at]
key fact,”
Rodriguez, 983 F.2d at 458. For that reason, we conclude that the conscious avoidance
instruction was appropriate with respect to Coplan.
The factual basis for the conscious avoidance instruction as to Shapiro and Nissenbaum
presents a much closer question. Because we are reversing Counts Two and Three with respect to
Shapiro and Nissenbaum based on the insufficiency of the evidence, see Part II.B, ante, we need not, and
do not, reach their challenges to the conscious avoidance instruction.
C. Economic Substance Instruction
Finally, the defendants also argue that the instructions on Counts Two and Three contained an
improper definition of “economic substance.” The District Court instructed the jury that the Add-On
transaction lacked “economic substance” if (1) the transaction offered “no reasonable possibility that
the transaction would result in a profit,” and (2) the relevant taxpayer had “no business purpose” for
engaging in the transaction.40 The defendants challenge the “no reasonable possibility that the
40 With respect to the economic substance test, the District Court instructed the jury as follows:
In order to establish that a transaction lacks economic substance, the government must
prove two elements beyond a reasonable doubt: The first element is that there was no reasonable
possibility that the transaction would result in a profit. The second element is that the relevant
taxpayer had no business purpose for engaging in the transaction in question apart from the creation
of the tax deduction.
....
Now, let me say a few words about your determination as to whether or not there was a
reasonable possibility that the shelter would result in a profit. This element requires you to reach an
63
transaction would result in a profit” language in the first element of the instruction, arguing instead a
transaction lacks economic substance only where there is “no market risk.”
As a general matter, a transaction that lacks economic substance will not provide the basis for a
tax deduction. Ferguson v. Comm’r,
29 F.3d 98, 101 (2d Cir. 1994). A transaction lacks economic
substance if it “can not [sic] with reason be said to have purpose, substance, or utility apart from [its]
anticipated tax consequences.” Lee v. Comm’r,
155 F.3d 584, 586 (2d Cir. 1998) (quotation mark
omitted); see also Jacobson v. Comm’r,
915 F.2d 832, 837 (2d Cir. 1990) (“A sham transaction analysis
requires a determination whether the transaction has any practicable economic effects other than the
creation of income tax losses.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
The law of economic substance, it must be said, is not a model of clarity. The economic
substance doctrine was, “if not formulated, then at least popularized” by Judge Learned Hand’s opinion
in Helvering v. Gregory,
69 F.2d 809 (2d Cir. 1934), aff’d, Gregory v. Helvering,
293 U.S. 465 (1935). David P.
Hariton, Sorting Out the Tangle of Economic Substance, 52 Tax Law. 235, 241 (1999). Since Gregory, the
economic substance doctrine “has been applied differently from circuit to circuit and sometimes
inconsistently within circuits.” Modern Tax Controversies, 957 Practicing Law Inst. at 478-35
(summarizing the “disjunctive, conjunctive, and unitary formulations” of the economic substance
doctrine).41
objective judgment about whether the government has proved that there was no reasonable
possibility that the shelter would result in a profit. In other words, this does not depend upon what
the taxpayer believed about the profit potential. It requires you to consider all of the evidence and
reach a conclusion about whether the government has proved beyond a reasonable doubt that there
was no reasonable possibility of a profit on the tax shelter after the fees and other costs were paid. If
you find that the government has proved beyond a reasonable doubt that there was no reasonable
possibility of a profit, then you move on to the second element, whether the relevant taxpayer had no
business purpose for engaging in the tax shelter. If you find that the government has not proved the
lack of a reasonable possibility of a profit, then you must reject the government’s theory and find the
defendants not guilty.
A VI: 424/6176–77 (paragraph breaks omitted).
41In 2010, Congress finally codified the economic substance doctrine at 26 U.S.C. § 7701(o). The codified version applies
prospectively to transactions entered into after March 30, 2010, and is therefore inapplicable to this case.
64
Our Circuit is no exception. In United States v. Atkins, we approved an instruction that a
transaction lacks economic substance if it was subject to “no market risk.”
869 F.2d 135, 140 (2d Cir.
1989) (upholding a charge that the transaction at issue lacked economic substance if (1) it was “not
intended either to make or preserve any profit or to limit a loss in any way,” and (2) it was subject to no
market risk in that “changes in market prices cannot have any effect” (quotation marks omitted)). In
United States v. Regan,
937 F.2d 823, 827 (2d Cir. 1991), we suggested, without expressly ruling, that a
“no market risk” instruction was erroneous on the particular facts of that case. Most recently, in a non-
precedential disposition, we approved an instruction that a transaction lacks economic substance when
there is “no reasonable possibility that the transaction would result in a profit.” United States v. Pfaff, 407
F. App’x 506, 508 (2d Cir. 2010) (quotation marks omitted). In so holding, we noted that the
“narrower definition” we previously approved did not “state the outer limits of the economic substance
doctrine.”
Id.
Despite these inconsistencies, we return to the premise that a transaction lacks economic
substance if it “can not [sic] with reason be said to have purpose, substance, or utility apart from [its]
anticipated tax consequences.”
Lee, 155 F.3d at 586 (emphasis added). Given the presence of the
reasonableness standard in our early formulations of the economic substance doctrine, we now hold
that the District Court’s “no reasonable possibility that the transaction would result in a profit”
instruction, see note 40, ante, accurately stated the law.
IX. “Spillover” Prejudice
Coplan argues that, should his conviction on Counts One, Two, Three, or Seven be overturned,
this Court would be obligated to vacate Count Five (obstruction of the IRS), based on “spillover
prejudice.” Because we affirm Coplan’s conviction in its entirety, we reject this argument. Vaughn
65
likewise argues that the allegedly improper venue on Count Six and the admission of the coconspirator
statements caused prejudicial spillover. We reject this argument, as we rejected its predicates.
X. Procedural and Substantive Reasonableness of Bolton’s Sentence
Finally, Bolton challenges the procedural and substantive reasonableness of his 15-month
sentence. As previously noted, Bolton pleaded guilty to a Superseding Information charging him in
one count of conspiracy, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, with three objectives: (1) a Klein conspiracy; (2)
making false statements to the IRS; and (3) obstruction of the IRS. On appeal, Bolton contends that
(1) the District Court erred in concluding that his conviction under § 371 resulted in a “tax loss” within
the meaning of the Guidelines; (2) his sentence of 15 months of imprisonment was substantively
unreasonable; and (3) the $3 million fine imposed by the District Court should be vacated in light of
United States v. Pfaff,
619 F.3d 172 (2d Cir. 2010).
We review a criminal sentence for “reasonableness,” which “amounts to review for abuse of
discretion.” United States v. Cavera,
550 F.3d 180, 187 (2d Cir. 2008) (en banc). “Reasonableness review
requires an examination of the length of the sentence (substantive reasonableness) as well as the
procedure employed in arriving at the sentence (procedural reasonableness).” United States v. Johnson,
567 F.3d 40, 51 (2d Cir. 2009). A district court commits procedural error where it fails to calculate (or
improperly calculates) the Guidelines range, treats the Guidelines as mandatory, fails to consider the §
3553(a) factors, selects a sentence based on clearly erroneous facts, or fails to adequately explain the
chosen sentence. Gall v. United States,
552 U.S. 38, 51 (2007). We have previously likened our review
for substantive unreasonableness “to the consideration of a motion for a new criminal jury trial, which
should be granted only when the jury’s verdict was ‘manifestly unjust,’ and to the determination of
intentional torts by state actors, which should be found only if the alleged tort ‘shocks the conscience.’”
66
United States v. Dorvee,
616 F.3d 174, 183 (2d Cir. 2010) (quoting United States v. Rigas,
583 F.3d 108,
122–23 (2d Cir. 2009)).
A. Sentencing Proceedings
The parties—the Government and Bolton, in this context—stipulated in the plea agreement
that “under the special facts of this case applicable to the defendant, there is no ‘tax loss’ as defined in
§ 2T1.1(c) of the Sentencing Guidelines.” Bolton A. 36. It was further stipulated that Bolton’s
advisory Guidelines range would be 0 to 6 months of imprisonment if the Court applied U.S.S.G.
§ 2T1.9, or 10 to 16 months of imprisonment if the Court applied U.S.S.G. § 2J1.2. The Pre-Sentence
Report of the U.S. Probation Office calculated an advisory Guidelines range of 0 to 6 months of
imprisonment under § 2T1.9 and recommended a sentence of 6 months of imprisonment. In its
sentencing submission, the Government agreed with the Probation Office that the applicable
Guidelines range was 0 to 6 months, but urged the Court to impose a sentence above that range based
on the factors set forth in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a).
By order dated January 29, 2010, Judge Stein ordered counsel to appear at a hearing in order to
discuss “several issues” related to Bolton’s Guidelines calculation. At that hearing, Judge Stein
explained that he had a “huge problem” with the parties’ stipulation that no tax loss was attributable to
Bolton under the Guidelines. Specifically, Judge Stein stated that he could not be “intellectually
honest” and adopt the position that there was no tax loss attributable to Bolton in light of his (Judge
Stein’s) conclusion that the tax loss attributable to the trial defendants exceeded $400 million. At the
April 13, 2010 sentencing hearing, Judge Stein applied § 2T1.1(a) and calculated an advisory Guidelines
range of 210 to 262 months of imprisonment based on an estimated tax loss in excess of $400 million.
He then imposed a sentence of 15 months of imprisonment, noting that “if my finding on loss is
67
incorrect, the sentence would still be the same because this is a substantial, massive departure.” Bolton
A 117.
B. Procedural Unreasonableness
Bolton argues on appeal that the District Court committed procedural error by applying
§ 2T1.1(a) even though he was not convicted of tax evasion. In essence, Bolton contends that a “tax
loss” within the meaning of the Guidelines exists only where a defendant willfully evaded taxes or
committed certain other “specific intent” crimes.
The Guideline applicable to § 371 conspiracy convictions is § 2T1.9,42 which states that a
defendant’s base offense level shall be the greater of 10 or the offense level determined from § 2T1.1 or
§ 2T1.4, as appropriate. Section 2T1.1 is entitled “Tax Evasion; Willful Failure to File Return, Supply
Information, or Pay Tax; Fraudulent or False Returns, Statements, or Other Documents.”43 Section
2T1.4 is entitled “Aiding, Assisting, Procuring, Counseling, or Advising Tax Fraud.”44 Under either
provision, the base offense level is determined by calculating the “tax loss” for the offense.
42 Section 2T1.9 provides, in relevant part:
Conspiracy to Impede, Impair, Obstruct, or Defeat Tax
(a) Base Offense Level (Apply the greater):
(1) Offense level determined from § 2T1.1 or § 2T1.4, as appropriate; or
(2) 10.
U.S.S.G. § 2T1.9(a).
43 Section 2T1.1 provides, in relevant part:
Tax Evasion; Willful Failure to File Return, Supply Information, or Pay Tax; Fraudulent or False Returns,
Statements, or Other Documents
(a) Base Offense Level:
(1) Level from § 2T4.1 (Tax Table) corresponding to the tax loss; or
(2) 6, if there is no tax loss.
U.S.S.G. § 2T1.1(a).
44 Section 2T1.4 provides, in relevant part:
Aiding, Assisting, Procuring, Counseling, or Advising Tax Fraud
(a) Base Offense Level:
(1) Level from § 2T4.1 (Tax Table) corresponding to the tax loss; or
68
Pursuant to § 2T1.1(c)(1), a “tax loss” is defined as follows:
If the offense involved tax evasion or a fraudulent or false return, statement or other
document, the tax loss is the total amount of loss that was the object of the offense
(i.e., the loss that would have resulted had the offense been successfully completed).
U.S.S.G. § 2T1.1(c)(1). The definition measures tax loss by reference to “the object of the offense.”
But nothing in the definition limits the existence of a “tax loss” to instances where a defendant acted
willfully or otherwise intended to cause a loss to the IRS. Thus, although the title of the provision
makes clear that § 2T1.1 is focused on tax evasion and other willful violations of the tax laws, nothing
in the language limits the application of § 2T1.1 to such crimes.45 Assuming arguendo that the
District Court did err in applying § 2T1.1, that error would be harmless because the District Court
stated explicitly that it would impose the same sentence regardless of the loss amount. See United States
v. Jass,
569 F.3d 47, 68 (2d Cir. 2009) (“Where we identify procedural error in a sentence, but the record
indicates clearly that the district court would have imposed the same sentence in any event, the error
may be deemed harmless, avoiding the need to vacate the sentence and to remand the case for
sentencing.” (internal quotation marks omitted)). Bolton attempts to minimize the significance of the
District Court’s statements by characterizing them as “cursory” observations “near the close of Mr.
Bolton’s sentencing.” But nothing about the sentencing below was “cursory.” Although the Court
determined that the applicable Guidelines range was 210 to 262 months of imprisonment, it ultimately
imposed a sentence of 15 months—a 93% reduction from the low end of that range. Inasmuch as
Bolton’s sentence clearly was not driven by the initial Guidelines calculation, the Court’s statement that
(2) 6, if there is no tax loss.
For purposes of this guideline, the “tax loss” is the tax loss, as defined in § 2T1.1, resulting from the defendant’s aid,
assistance, procurance or advice.
U.S.S.G. § 2T1.1(a).
We note, however, our considerable skepticism about the wisdom of applying an intended rather than actual loss measure
45
where, as here, the defendant has not been convicted of a crime requiring him to have the specific intent to cause a tax loss.
69
it would impose the same sentence even in the absence of a tax loss is amply supported by the record.
For that reason, we can “confidently conclude” that any arguable error here was harmless.
Id.
C. Substantive Unreasonableness
Bolton also argues that his 15-month sentence was substantively unreasonable because the
District Court “unreasonably weighted the seriousness of [his] offense based on the evidence,
particularly in comparison to the E&Y defendants.”46 Bolton Br. 28. But given the fact that Bolton
played a significant and necessary role in the conspiracy (by coming up with the Add-On cover story
and signing IRS documents, for example), as well as his significant financial gain in implementing the
transactions, it cannot be said that his 15-month sentence was “manifestly unjust.” See
Rigas, 583 F.3d
at 122.
D. Fine Imposed on Bolton
Finally, Bolton argues—and the Government agrees—that the $3 million fine imposed by the
District Court should be vacated in light of United States v. Pfaff,
619 F.3d 172 (2d Cir. 2010), which was
decided four months after Bolton’s sentencing. In Pfaff, we held that, in the absence of a jury finding, a
district court may not impose a fine greater than the default statutory maximums provided by 18 U.S.C.
§ 3571(d).
Id. at 175 (“[I]t is the clear implication of Apprendi and Blakely that when a jury does not
make a pecuniary gain or loss finding, § 3571’s default statutory maximums cap the amount a district
court may fine the defendant.”). Further, in the time period between the sentencing hearing in this case
and the filing of this opinion, the Supreme Court decided Southern Union Co. v. United States, squarely
holding that “the rule of Apprendi applies to the imposition of criminal fines.”
132 S. Ct. 2344, 2357
(2012) (Sotomayor, J.).
46The sentences of the trial defendants were as follows: Robert Coplan (36 months), Martin Nissenbaum (30 months),
Richard Shapiro (28 months), Brian Vaughn (20 months).
70
It is indisputable that the District Court could not impose a fine in excess of the statutory
maximum of $250,000. See 18 U.S.C. § 3571(b)(3). Accordingly, we vacate the portion of Bolton’s
sentence that imposed the fine, and remand the cause to the District Court for the sole purpose of
reducing the fine to the statutory maximum of $250,000.
CONCLUSION
The District Court presided over this complex and difficult case with admirable care and
understanding of its intricacies.
To summarize, we hold that:
(1) The defendants’ challenge to the so-called Klein conspiracy theory of criminal liability
under 18 U.S.C. § 371 fails under the law of the Circuit, which remains good law absent
review or modification by the Supreme Court;
(2) With respect to the sufficiency challenges:
a. The convictions of Shapiro and Nissenbaum on Count One, charging conspiracy in
violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, are REVERSED due to insufficient evidence;
b. The convictions of Shapiro and Nissenbaum on Counts Two and Three, charging
tax evasion in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201, are REVERSED due to insufficient
evidence;
c. Nissenbaum’s conviction on Count Four, charging him with obstruction of the IRS
in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7212, is REVERSED due to insufficient evidence;
(3) Venue was proper with respect to Count Six, which charged Vaughn with false statements
to the IRS in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1001;
(4) The District Court did not err by admitting the testimony of Graham Taylor;
71
(5) The District Court did not err by admitting the out-of-court statements of the alleged
coconspirators;
(6) The District Court did not err by excluding portions of Coplan’s and Vaughn’s deposition
transcripts;
(7) There was no prosecutorial misconduct in the Government’s rebuttal summation;
(8) The District Court did not err by:
a. declining to give a “theory of the defense” instruction;
b. including a conscious avoidance instruction; or
c. instructing the jury that “economic substance” existed only if there was a
“reasonable possibility” of profit;
(9) Spillover prejudice did not infect the remaining convictions; and
(10) The portion of Bolton’s sentence imposing a fine is VACATED and the cause is
REMANDED for the sole purpose of reducing the fine to the statutory maximum of
$250,000.
In light of these holdings, the judgments of conviction of Coplan and Vaughn are AFFIRMED,
the judgments of conviction of Shapiro and Nissenbaum are REVERSED, and the portion of
Bolton’s sentence imposing a $3 million fine VACATED and the cause is REMANDED for the sole
purpose of reducing the fine to the statutory maximum of $250,000. Judgment with respect to
defendants Shapiro and Nissenbaum shall enter on all counts as to which we have reversed the
judgment of the District Court.
72
APPENDIX A
United States v. Robert Coplan, Martin Nissenbaum, Richard Shapiro & Brian Vaughn
07 Cr. 453 (SHS)
Redacted Indictment
[Source: A. 90-143.]
Count Title Statute Defendants
Count 1 Conspiracy 18 U.S.C. § 371 Coplan, Nissenbaum,
Shapiro, Vaughn
Objectives:
Klein conspiracy;
Tax Evasion;
False Statements
Count 2 Tax Evasion 26 U.S.C. § 7201; Coplan, Nissenbaum,
[Client: LaRocque] 18 U.S.C. § 2 Shapiro, Vaughn
Count 3 Tax Evasion 26 U.S.C. § 7201; Coplan, Nissenbaum,
[Client: Cornerstone] 18 U.S.C. § 2 Shapiro, Vaughn
Count 4 Obstruction of the 26 U.S.C. § 7212 Nissenbaum
IRS
Count 5 Obstruction of the 26 U.S.C. § 7212 Coplan
IRS
Count 6 False Statements to 18 U.S.C. § 1001 Vaughn
the IRS
Count 7 False Statements to 18 U.S.C. § 1001 Coplan
the IRS
United States v. Charles Bolton
07 Cr. 453 (SHS)
Superseding Information
[Source: Bolton A. 28-34.]
Count Title Statute Defendant
Count 1 Conspiracy 18 U.S.C. § 371 Bolton
73
APPENDIX B
RELEVANT STATUTORY PROVISIONS
18 U.S.C. § 371—Conspiracy to Commit Offense or to Defraud United States
If two or more persons conspire either to commit any offense against the United States, or to
defraud the United States, or any agency thereof in any manner or for any purpose, and one or more of
such persons do any act to effect the object of the conspiracy, each shall be fined under this title or
imprisoned not more than five years, or both.
If, however, the offense, the commission of which is the object of the conspiracy, is a
misdemeanor only, the punishment for such conspiracy shall not exceed the maximum punishment
provided for such misdemeanor.
26 U.S.C. § 7201—Attempt to Evade or Defeat Tax
Any person who willfully attempts in any manner to evade or defeat any tax imposed by this
title or the payment thereof shall, in addition to other penalties provided by law, be guilty of a felony
and, upon conviction thereof, shall be fined not more than $100,000 ($500,000 in the case of a
corporation), or imprisoned not more than 5 years, or both, together with the costs of prosecution.
26 U.S.C. § 7212—Attempts to Interfere with Administration of Internal Revenue Laws
(a) Corrupt or forcible interference
Whoever corruptly or by force or threats of force (including any threatening letter or
communication) endeavors to intimidate or impede any officer or employee of the United States acting
in an official capacity under this title, or in any other way corruptly or by force or threats of force
(including any threatening letter or communication) obstructs or impedes, or endeavors to obstruct or
impede, the due administration of this title, shall, upon conviction thereof, be fined not more than
$5,000, or imprisoned not more than 3 years, or both, except that if the offense is committed only by
threats of force, the person convicted thereof shall be fined not more than $3,000, or imprisoned not
more than 1 year, or both. The term “threats of force”, as used in this subsection, means threats of
bodily harm to the officer or employee of the United States or to a member of his family.
(b) Forcible rescue of seized property
Any person who forcibly rescues or causes to be rescued any property after it shall have been
seized under this title, or shall attempt or endeavor so to do, shall, excepting in cases otherwise
provided for, for every such offense, be fined not more than $500, or not more than double the value
of the property so rescued, whichever is the greater, or be imprisoned not more than 2 years.
74
18 U.S.C. § 1001—Statements or Entries Generally
(a) Except as otherwise provided in this section, whoever, in any matter within the jurisdiction of the
executive, legislative, or judicial branch of the Government of the United States, knowingly and
willfully—
(1) falsifies, conceals, or covers up by any trick, scheme, or device a material fact;
(2) makes any materially false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or representation; or
(3) makes or uses any false writing or document knowing the same to contain any materially
false, fictitious, or fraudulent statement or entry;
shall be fined under this title, imprisoned not more than 5 years or, if the offense involves international
or domestic terrorism (as defined in section 2331), imprisoned not more than 8 years, or both. If the
matter relates to an offense under chapter 109A, 109B, 110, or 117, or section 1591, then the term of
imprisonment imposed under this section shall be not more than 8 years.
(b) Subsection (a) does not apply to a party to a judicial proceeding, or that party’s counsel, for
statements, representations, writings or documents submitted by such party or counsel to a judge or
magistrate in that proceeding.
(c) With respect to any matter within the jurisdiction of the legislative branch, subsection (a) shall apply
only to—
(1) administrative matters, including a claim for payment, a matter related to the procurement
of property or services, personnel or employment practices, or support services, or a
document required by law, rule, or regulation to be submitted to the Congress or any office
or officer within the legislative branch; or
(2) any investigation or review, conducted pursuant to the authority of any committee,
subcommittee, commission or office of the Congress, consistent with applicable rules of the
House or Senate.
75
USA v. Coplan, No.
10-0583-cr(L)
1 KEARSE, Circuit Judge, dissenting in part:
2 I respectfully dissent from so much of the Majority Opinion as finds the evidence
3 insufficient to support (1) the convictions of defendants Richard Shapiro and Martin Nissenbaum of
4 conspiracy, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, to (a) defraud the United States by impairing the lawful
5 functions of an agency of the United States government, to wit, the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS"),
6 (b) commit tax evasion, see 26 U.S.C. § 7201, and (c) make false statements to the IRS, see 18 U.S.C.
7 § 1001 (Count One); and (2) those two defendants' convictions of attempted tax evasion in violation
8 of 26 U.S.C. § 7201 (Counts Two and Three).
9 As the Majority Opinion sets out, this prosecution focused principally on
10 the design, implementation, and audit defense of four tax shelters developed
11 by the [Ernst & Young LLP ("E&Y")] VIPER Group/SISG: the (1)
12 Contingent Deferred Swap ("CDS"); (2) Currency Options Bring Reward
13 Alternatives ("COBRA"); (3) CDS Add-On ("Add-On"); and (4) Personal
14 Investment Corporation ("PICO") shelters.
15 Majority Opinion ante at 4. "The IRS can disallow deductions resulting from a transaction that 'can
16 not [sic] with reason be said to have purpose, substance, or utility apart from [its] anticipated tax
17 consequences. Such transactions are said to lack "economic substance."'" Majority Opinion ante
18 at 10 n.15 (quoting, with alterations, Lee v. Commissioner,
155 F.3d 584, 586 (2d Cir. 1998)).
1 Count One of the superseding indictment alleged that each of the above four tax
2 shelters, along with one other, was fraudulent, and that Shapiro, Nissenbaum, and defendant Robert
3 Coplan--each of whom was a lawyer with a Master's Degree in tax law and decades of experience in
4 tax practice--and other persons known and unknown, conspired and agreed to defraud the United
5 States, to violate the federal income tax laws, and to make false statements to the IRS. As the
6 Majority Opinion acknowledges, the evidence as to the conspiracy's objectives is not deficient if there
7 is sufficient evidence of at least one of the alleged objectives. See Majority Opinion ante at 18.
8 "[T]he Government sought to demonstrate that the defendants hid the truth from the IRS by
9 withholding information and making affirmative misstatements" about these shelters, Majority
10 Opinion ante at 10, in IRS audit interviews and in connection with a 2000 IRS amnesty program that
11 would allow a person who had invested in tax shelters, if the IRS deemed them not legitimate
12 transactions, to avoid paying penalties on those transactions.
13 The Majority does not suggest that there was insufficient evidence for the jury to find
14 that there existed a conspiracy with one or more of the objectives alleged in Count One. Nor could
15 it, given that Coplan and defendant Brian Vaughn, a certified public accountant and certified financial
16 planner employed by E&Y, were convicted of participating in the alleged conspiracy and that we
17 affirm those convictions. Rather, the Majority finds that the evidence was insufficient to show that
18 Shapiro and Nissenbaum knew of the conspiracy and participated in it. See Majority Opinion ante
19 at 18-19.
20 The Majority Opinion sets out the well established legal principles that "[i]n the
21 context of a conspiracy conviction, 'deference to the jury's findings is especially important . . . because
22 a conspiracy by its very nature is a secretive operation, and it is a rare case where all aspects of a
2
1 conspiracy can be laid bare in court,'" Majority Opinion ante at 18 (quoting United States v. Rojas,
2
617 F.3d 669, 674 (2d Cir. 2010)); that "'the government is entitled to prove its case solely through
3 circumstantial evidence,'" Majority Opinion ante at 29 (quoting United States v. Rodriguez,
392 F.3d
4 539, 544 (2d Cir. 2004)); and that "[i]n evaluating a sufficiency challenge, we 'must view the evidence
5 in the light most favorable to the government, crediting every inference that could have been drawn
6 in the government's favor, and deferring to the jury's assessment of witness credibility and its
7 assessment of the weight of the evidence.'" Majority Opinion ante at 17 (quoting United States v.
8 Chavez,
549 F.3d 119, 124-25 (2d Cir. 2008)). But in finding the evidence insufficient to permit the
9 jury to infer that Shapiro and Nissenbaum knew of the conspiracy and participated in it, the Majority
10 does not apply these principles.
11 A. The Conspiracy Count
12 E&Y, an accounting firm, had a Personal Financial Counseling group ("PFC") that
13 included a group, initially called VIPER--an acronym for Value Ideas Produce Extraordinary Results--
14 and whose name was later changed to Strategic Individual Solutions Group ("SISG") (see
15 Government Exhibit ("GX") 73), which marketed tax shelters (see Trial Transcript ("Tr."), 4619,
16 1069). Coplan was the leader of this "high net worth market group" (Tr. 4619-20); Shapiro and
17 Nissenbaum were core members (see, e.g.,
id. at 2135-37, 2236).
18 At trial, the government introduced numerous e-mails between or among Shapiro,
19 Nissenbaum, and Coplan (and others) discussing, inter alia, the need to prevent certain materials,
20 which mentioned E&Y clients' interest in minimizing or eliminating taxes, from falling into the hands
21 of the IRS. These included:
3
1 - GX 795 (Coplan e-mail dated November 27, 2000, with copies to Shapiro, among
2 others, stating, "we refrain from sending out--or leaving with a client--promotional
3 materials that go through the steps of a strategy, or even highlight the tax benefits of
4 a strategy. Business purpose is a critical element to prove for these solutions, and the
5 less evidence there is that the client responded to a tax-saving promotion, the better
6 for his argument that there were non-tax motivations guiding his actions." (emphasis
7 added));
8 - GX 860 (Shapiro e-mail dated May 22, 2001, to Melinda Merk, a member of the PFC
9 group who worked with SISG (see Tr. 1281), stating that "as a general rule,
10 presentation materials SHOULD NOT be left with the client. Clients may take notes,
11 etc., but materials should be handed back at the end of the meeting. In an audit
12 meeting i [sic] had in Minneapolis on a COBRA transaction, one of the items
13 requested of the taxpayer was any promotional materials that they had.");
14 - GX 795 (Merk e-mail dated November 22, 2000, to an E&Y tax department
15 employee stating "I am hesitant to prepare and provide any summary for delivery to
16 a potential client, based on my recent conversations with Richard Shapiro and Bob
17 Coplan that we be very careful about providing such information in writing for
18 potential dissemination into the marketplace and/or receipt by the media, Treasury
19 . . . ." (emphases added));
20 - GX 555 (Coplan e-mail dated July 17, 2001, to some 60 E&Y employees, including
21 Shapiro and Nissenbaum, "instruct[ing them] to immediately delete and dispose of any
22 and all materials in [their] drawers and on [their] computers related to the COBRA
23 transaction other than" opinion letters and documents related to the client's currency
24 trades and "documents supporting the economic purpose and bona fide nature of the
25 investment in the transaction" (emphases added));
26 - GX 602 (Coplan e-mail dated July 23, 2001, to some 60 E&Y employees, including
27 Shapiro and Nissenbaum, re "PICO Materials Leak," stating that a potential client had
28 sent a set of E&Y's PICO materials to an E&Y competitor, and that although Coplan
29 was "not suggesting that this is necessarily a calamitous event[, t]he potential negative
30 repercussions are obvious, and a fax of the materials to certain people [including] the
31 government WOULD have calamitous results" (emphasis added)); and
32 - GX 639 (Coplan e-mail dated June 14, 2000, to an E&Y regional senior manager,
33 with a copy to Shapiro re "Final Set of CDS Add-On Slides," stating, inter alia, that
34 "[i]f these slides ever made their way to the IRS . . . the entire business purpose
35 argument that gives us the ability to distinguish this from COBRA would be out the
36 window." (emphases added)).
4
1 As discussed below in subparts 1-4 and Part B below, the government also presented
2 testimony from many witnesses, including
3 - former E&Y tax partner Thomas A. Dougherty, who testified that, in the presence
4 of Shapiro and others, he lied to the IRS in connection with the COBRA tax shelter,
5 making false but "plausible" representations that he had discussed with Shapiro;
6 - former E&Y client Kathryn Munro, who testified to statements made--and statements
7 not made--to her by E&Y in connection with investments in CDS and Add-On
8 shelters, and with respect to false and misleading amnesty letters prepared by E&Y for
9 submission to the IRS;
10 - former E&Y manager Jason Bryant Rydberg, who dealt with Munro and testified to,
11 inter alia, the preparation of false and misleading opinion letters and letters to the IRS
12 following its offer of amnesty with regard to CDS and Add-On tax shelters, and
13 testified to the E&Y requirement that presentations with regard to those shelters be
14 shown in advance to Shapiro;
15 - former E&Y manager Belle Six--who earned a total of some $22 million in
16 commissions both from selling CDS shelters while at E&Y working with, among
17 others, Shapiro, Coplan, and Nissenbaum, and from selling E&Y Add-On shelters
18 thereafter--who had pleaded guilty to conspiring to defraud the government and had
19 been required to pay or forfeit that total to the government (see Tr. 2106-10); and
20 - former practicing lawyer Peter Cinquegrani, who had pleaded guilty to, inter alia,
21 conspiring with others to give false statements and false documents to the IRS in
22 connection with the PICO tax shelter, having collaborated with Shapiro in fashioning
23 PICO opinion letters that Cinquegrani testified he knew contained false and
24 misleading statements constituting a "cover story" (Tr. 4015).
25 1. Shapiro and COBRA
26 Shapiro was the E&Y leader on the national roll-out presentation of the COBRA tax
27 shelter in 1999. (See Tr. 4588.) Dougherty testified principally about the professed--and purported--
28 interests of three members of a partnership called WRB Lake who invested in a COBRA tax shelter.
29 Dougherty had been instructed by E&Y's tax division director to ask two of those partners--E&Y
30 clients Bill Wanner and Brian Sullivan, whose business was water purification and desalinization and
5
1 who were selling a company at a profit of more than $20 million each--whether they were interested
2 in E&Y's CDS strategy (see
id. at 1081-86) to convert their ordinary income, which would have been
3 taxable at about a 40% rate, into long-term capital gains, which would be taxable at 20% (see
4 generally
id. at 2149). However, Wanner and Sullivan, along with another WRB Lake partner,
5 informed Dougherty that they were interested instead in a strategy whereby taxes on their transaction
6 would be not just minimized but "eliminate[d]." (Id. at 1087.) After E&Y decided to market
7 COBRA, its tax elimination strategy (see
id. at 1088-89), the WRB Lake partners sought "to enter into
8 a COBRA transaction . . . for the purpose of eliminating tax on the transaction they were going
9 through"; the clients said they "w[ere] interested in pursuing [COBRA] for that purpose" (id. at 1183),
10 and in 1999 they did so. From the outset, Wanner had stated his "desire to enter into the COBRA
11 transaction for purposes of creating a tax loss." (Id. at 1141.)
12 In mid-March 2001, Sullivan received notice from the IRS that the WRB Lake
13 partnership was being audited. He so informed Dougherty, who in turn informed Coplan by e-mail
14 and fax, which Coplan forwarded to, among others, Shapiro, Nissenbaum, and Denis Conlon (see
15 Tr. 1171-75), a member of E&Y's national tax practice whose specialty was responding to contacts
16 from the IRS (see GX 540; Tr. 1175-76). In a conference call in early April, Dougherty discussed
17 with Coplan and Conlon the "facts that could hurt the client's [sic] case" (Tr. 1186). Dougherty,
18 Coplan, and Conlon "tr[ied] to . . . come up with some ideas that may be presented to the [IRS] agent
19 for why the[]" WRB Lake partners entered the COBRA transaction (id. at 1182 (emphases added)),
20 even though Dougherty, Coplan, and Conlon "knew that this was a COBRA transaction, one all three
21 principals had entered into . . . to realize the tax savings" (id. at 1181). Dougherty testified:
22 At this point of the discussion, we're looking at other reasons that the taxpayers
23 came together for the purposes of why did they purchase foreign digital
6
1 contracts, why did they do this together in a partnership, and why did they
2 decide to terminate that partnership and not do any more foreign currency
3 investing.
4 (Id.) Dougherty advanced various possible explanations, including that Wanner had had some prior
5 experience, in his business, of doing some foreign currency trading, and "maybe that was something
6 we could throw out as being the fact supporting a reason for entering into this transaction" (id. at 1182
7 (emphasis added)), although Wanner had not indicated to Dougherty any such motivation (see
id.
8 at 1181-83). Dougherty "also talked about the fact that the three [WRB Lake partners] happened to
9 be joint investors in [a] newly formed company," which could explain why "they would be willing
10 to form a partnership together and carry on some partnership investment activities. Maybe that would
11 be something we could use." (Id. at 1182 (emphasis added).) Dougherty had already told Coplan and
12 Conlon "the real history behind these clients; that is, how they came to Ernst & Young and the
13 COBRA transaction." (Id. at 1736.) "They knew those facts about the three clients." (Id. at 1738.)
14 "We were talking about plausible reasons that could be presented"; "we needed to come up with some
15 business reasons why the transaction took place in the form it took place." (Id. at 1740 (emphases
16 added).)
17 After that conference call among Dougherty, Coplan, and Conlon, Conlon sent
18 Dougherty and Coplan an e-mail dated April 19, 2001, stating that they needed to have Shapiro join
19 the thinking (see GX 542 ("I think we need Richard . . . . I want to state our case clearly and correctly
20 from the beginning . . . . IRS would like to catch us cold and get admissions that will hurt our case.
21 We need to make sure that does not happen.")). Accordingly, on April 20, 2001, Coplan e-mailed
22 Dougherty, Conlon, and Shapiro to schedule a conference "call with all of us . . . to go over the facts
23 of this case and plan how we will approach the agents on this matter." (Tr. 1188.)
7
1 In late April, a conference call was held among Dougherty, Coplan, Conlon, and
2 Shapiro. During that call, Shapiro raised the question of business purpose (see Tr. 1741-42), saying
3 "[w]e need to discuss business purpose on this transaction" (id. at 1191). Dougherty, however,
4 "[h]ad" already "told Mr. Shapiro at that point the real facts about how these clients had come to Ernst
5 & Young for the COBRA transaction." (Id. at 1741 (emphasis added).) The reason Dougherty,
6 Coplan, Conlon, and Shapiro were "discussing business purpose" was the "same reason" that
7 Dougherty, Coplan, and Conlon had discussed possible business purposes in their earlier call: they
8 needed "to talk about the other reasons, plausible reasons, that could be discussed . . . should it
9 become important to discuss that at the meeting with the agent." (Id. (emphases added).)
10 Dougherty testified that in the ensuing May 17, 2001 IRS interview, attended by
11 Dougherty, Conlon, and Shapiro, Dougherty "lied" to the IRS agent "about why the three [WRB Lake
12 partners] got into the COBRA transactions." (Tr. 1743.) Dougherty gave the agent "the plausible
13 reasons that we had talked about during the discussions, which were misleading the agent as to the
14 real purpose." (Id. at 1743-44 (emphases added).) Dougherty testified that the "[s]tatements [he]
15 made to the agent about why the clients had done this, were . . . things [he] had gone over during the
16 calls with Mr. Coplan, Mr. Conlon, and Mr. Shapiro." (Id. at 1743 (emphasis added).)
17 From this series of events alone, the jury could permissibly find that, with respect to
18 COBRA, Shapiro knowingly joined and participated in the conspiracy with Coplan and others to
19 impair the lawful functions of the IRS and to make false statements to the IRS.
8
1 2. Shapiro and CDS and CDS Add-On
2 In addition, Shapiro was E&Y's "subject matter expert"--or "SME"--on its CDS
3 strategy (Tr. 4555), which would convert high ordinary income into long-term capital gains (taxable
4 at about half the rate of such ordinary income), and on the Add-On strategy (see GX 636), which,
5 when used in the second year of a CDS transaction, would involve the creation and liquidation of an
6 LLC and eliminate even the capital gains. The SME had the "technical expertise" (Tr. 4876), i.e., he
7 "was the person that knew the transaction the best and that's who you went to for the questions" (id.
8 at 4555) and "for approval" (id.). For example, a regional senior manager sent an e-mail to Shapiro
9 forwarding a Power Point presentation to Shapiro "for approval as the CDS SME." (GX 30, dated
10 October 22, 1999.) And in response to a Power Point presentation proposed by Vaughn for Add-On,
11 Coplan stated that "the Add-On strategy will lose all of its 'business purpose' if it is reduced to steps
12 in a PowerPoint slide. The tax objective will appear to be the driving force" (GX 636 (Coplan e-mail
13 dated June 14, 2000, to Vaughn, with a copy to Shapiro)); Coplan recommended not using slides and
14 recommended that all "materials like this" should be reviewed in advance by Shapiro, as the Add-On
15 "SME" (id.).
16 Success of the CDS shelter--involving a partnership that was to engage in swap
17 transactions purportedly having a term of 18 months--depended on the swap's termination after one
18 year but short of the 18-month stated termination date. One year was the dividing line between short-
19 term capital gains and long-term capital gains; termination prior to the end of the stated 18-month
20 term was required for gains to be treated as capital gains rather than ordinary income. (See, e.g.,
21 Tr. 2198-99.) Shapiro repeatedly urged that the fact that early termination was pre-planned not be
22 disclosed. On February 8, 2000, he sent an e-mail to Merk, with copies to Nissenbaum, Coplan, and
9
1 Vaughn, on "the [CDS] action plan"; in addition to suggesting that he, Shapiro, along with Coplan
2 or Vaughn, should be involved in any CDS sales contact, Shapiro noted "the fact that our swap will
3 be terminated early"--and noted that this was "[c]learly . . . necessary for the flow of the transaction"--
4 and he "question[ed] . . . seriously" whether there "should . . . be a document in existence . . . that has
5 all chapters and verses laid out." (GX 66 (emphases added).) Shapiro added that "[t]he fact that no
6 materials are to be left behind at a sales call is not enough. In my opinion, before anything is in 'stone'
7 here, we should consider what are [sic] record will/should look like." (Id. (emphasis added).) And
8 in an e-mail to Vaughn about "cds models," with copies to Nissenbaum, Coplan, and others, Shapiro
9 instructed that certain "deletions" from the model documents were "essential," and that the statements
10 that "'Calculations assume utilization of the Early Termination Provision . . .' should be deleted."
11 (GX 100, dated April 14, 2000.)
12 Bolton Capital Planning ("Bolton" or "BCP") was the general partner in some LLPs
13 created for CDS shelters. (See, e.g., Tr. 2215-16, 2477; GX 1231.) After Bolton received an inquiry
14 from the IRS with regard to a CDS shelter, Coplan revised the language of the initial draft of the BCP
15 response to the IRS inquiry to state that "[i]f the general partner, based on market fluctuations,
16 terminates the swap contracts early, capital gain would arise on such termination" (GX 412 (Coplan
17 e-mail dated January 18, 2001 (emphasis added))). Six testified that this "does not" (Tr. 2321)
18 "accurately describe what . . . clients" were "told . . . about early termination and how the decision was
19 made to early terminate" the CDS swaps (id. at 2320). The decision was not to be made based on
20 market fluctuations; the "understanding" was "[t]hat we assumed we would terminate, early terminate
21 . . . if the counterparty did not." (Id. at 2321 (emphases added).) The revised language in GX 412 had
22 been introduced the previous day in an e-mail from Coplan to Shapiro, Nissenbaum, and others, with
10
1 the statement that "This one should be more acceptable to Richard." (GX 932, dated January 17,
2 2001; see Tr. 2318-22.)
3 Consistent with Shapiro's observation that "early" termination was necessary for
4 success of the CDS strategy but should not be so described, former E&Y client Munro testified that
5 when she and her husband had invested in a CDS shelter, they were not told that the swap had a
6 duration of 18 months. They were simply told it would last a year. (See Tr. 3548; see also
id. at 4564
7 (Rydberg testifying that "the maturity date of the swap that[ was] used in the CDS transaction" was
8 18 months; "[w]e told [clients] it would last 12 months and a day to the early termination date");
id.
9 at 4537 ("all the CDS transactions ha[d] the same . . . early termination date" of "12 months and one
10 day").)
11 Munro also testified that the "purpose of [the Munros' CDS] transaction was to defer
12 [their] tax liability until [they] sold" shares that her husband had received from the exercise of stock
13 options "and could pay the capital gains tax." (Tr. 3539; see also
id. at 3525, 3530-32.) In 1999 with
14 respect to CDS and in 2001 with respect to Add-On, Rydberg sent the Munros "representation
15 letter[s]" to sign and return in order to receive opinions from a law firm as to the legitimacy of their
16 investments in CDS and Add-On. (Id. at 3519-24, 4637-38.) Munro testified that these were letters
17 that she did "[n]ot really" read before signing (id. at 3524), having "paid a lot of money to Ernst &
18 Young for tax advice" (id. at 3526; see, e.g.,
id. at 4581 (Rydberg testifying that he told clients "the
19 fee[] for th[e CDS] transaction . . . was 4 percent of the loss that was being generated");
id. at 3512
20 (the Munros, for their CDS transaction, paid E&Y $400,000)). Munro testified that the representation
21 letters were false and misleading in that they misstated the purpose for which she and her husband had
22 invested in CDS and Add-On; and the opinion letters received by the Munros--who did not deal with
23 the opining law firm except through E&Y--repeated those misstatements. (See
id. at 3524-41.)
11
1 Munro testified that, contrary to the E&Y-drafted representation letters, "[w]e did not
2 invest in [the partnership] as a sound financial investment. We invested in it so we could pay less in
3 taxes. That was the basic purpose of the transaction." (Tr. 3525.) Contrary to the representation
4 letters, "[i]t wasn't a sound coherent business strategy. It was a specific transaction to help us reduce
5 our taxes"; nobody "from Ernst & Young talk[ed] to [Munro] about a coherent business philosophy
6 in connection with the CDS transaction." (Id.) Contrary to the opinion letters--which were based on
7 the representation letters--the CDS in fact "had a predetermined outcome . . . and the outcome was
8 the conversion of ordinary income to capital gains income. And that's what the purpose of the
9 transaction was about." (Id. at 3530-31.) Contrary to the opinion letters, the partnership formed by
10 Munro and her husband for the CDS had no "overall business plan"; "[t]he plan of the partnership was
11 to convert ordinary income that you had by exercising your options and convert it to capital gain. So
12 pay less in taxes was the primary purpose of the partnership." (Id. at 3531-32.)
13 In 2002, Rydberg informed Munro of the IRS's amnesty program, and E&Y drafted
14 amnesty letters for Munro and her husband with respect to CDS and Add-On, which were signed by
15 the Munros and were submitted to the IRS. (See Tr. 3545-46, 3550.) Munro testified that those
16 amnesty letters--which were based on the opinion letters and (a) described business purposes that the
17 Munros did not have, (b) did not mention the Munros' purpose of reducing taxes, and (c) stated that
18 the letters did not omit any material facts (see
id. at 3546 (describing GX 1231 as pertaining to CDS
19 and GX 1232 as pertaining to Add-On))--were false and misleading (see Tr. 3544-50).
20 The Munros' amnesty letters to the IRS, submitted in March 2002, had been drafted
21 by Rydberg. Rydberg testified that his draft for Add-On followed a template received from Coplan.
22 (See, e.g., Tr. 4657-58; GX 491.) Drafts of that template had been e-mailed by Coplan to, among
23 others, Shapiro and Nissenbaum on February 27, 2002 (see GX 490), and on March 5, 2002 (see
12
1 GX 491). In the latter e-mail, Coplan stated "Please look this over to see if there are any changes you
2 would make either to avoid unnecessary facts or to make it easier to complete accurately. I want to
3 post this and distribute this morning. I will be sending along the CDS template later this morning
4 . . . ." (Id.) Nissenbaum responded to Coplan, with a copy to Shapiro, that, other than believing
5 details as to the specific option trades to be unnecessary, "[t]he disclosure looks fine to me" (id.; see
6 Tr. 4663); and Shapiro provided some nonsubstantive comments that were adopted (see Tr. 4663-65;
7 compare GX 491 with GX 492). But "[t]hroughout these various drafts of the generic add-on amnesty
8 template, . . . the basic description of the transaction remain[ed] the same" (id. at 4665); and those
9 drafts omitted mention of tax-minimization or tax-elimination purposes (see GX 490, 491).
10 Although the Add-On strategy for CDS was the brainchild of Vaughn (see
11 Tr. 2378-79), Add-On was in reality a combination of CDS and COBRA (see
id. at 1378-81). Both
12 of the latter were shelters promoted to E&Y by Shapiro (see
id. at 2144-46 (CDS); id. at 4588
13 (COBRA)), and Shapiro was the SME for Add-On (see GX 636). Vaughn, in a June 9, 2000 e-mail
14 to numerous E&Y tax department employees, with copies to Shapiro, Coplan, and Nissenbaum, noted
15 that "[w]ith the add-on feature, CDS can now be applied to capital gain situations," and stated that
16 "the 1999 and 2000 clients that have completed a CDS transaction" would shortly be "notif[ied] . . .
17 of the opportunity to participate in the new trading program." (GX 633.) Shapiro responded: "i [sic]
18 remain concerned of the formal pre-wired tie-in to cobra. i [sic] think it adversely impacts the story
19 that we can tell regarding the purpose of the transaction." (Id. (emphasis added).) Coplan then edited
20 the letter to be sent to clients announcing Add-On and, in an e-mail dated July 1, 2000, to Shapiro,
21 Vaughn, Six, Merk, and Nissenbaum, stated, "I softened the last reference to the liquidation of the
22 interest in the LLC so it sounds less like an event that we know will happen in the near future."
23 (GX 144 (emphases added).) However, LLC liquidation was part of the eighth of 13 specified steps
13
1 that were necessary for the success of an Add-On transaction. (See GX 115 (Vaughn e-mail dated
2 May 18, 2000, to Coplan and Shapiro).) As Six testified, "liquidation of the interest in the LLC" in
3 fact "was one of the steps that was required to obtain the tax benefits." (Tr. 2410.)
4 3. Shapiro and PICO
5 The PICO (or Personal Investment Corporation) tax shelter was a tax deferral and
6 conversion strategy that involved investments in an S corporation, called PICO, by the taxpayer and
7 another shareholder. The PICO would engage in straddle transactions that generated offsetting gains
8 and losses, with only the losses allocated to the taxpayer. These capital losses could be used by the
9 taxpayer to offset his capital gains from unrelated sources. (See Tr. 3736.)
10 Cinquegrani, in early 2000, was an attorney who was approached, for an opinion letter,
11 by the person who had conceived of PICO and who instructed Cinquegrani to contact Richard
12 Shapiro, E&Y's lead contact for PICO. (See Tr. 3739-42.) In Cinquegrani's initial conversation with
13 Shapiro, there was no discussion of any business purpose or non-tax reason for PICO. (See
id.
14 at 3743-44.)
15 Cinquegrani proceeded to have legal issues researched, and he kept Shapiro informed
16 of the results. (See, e.g., Tr. 3748-49.) He had many conversations with Shapiro, "discuss[ing]
17 various provisions of the Internal Revenue Code that may apply to the transaction, and [Shapiro]
18 asked about what issues were or were not being included in the opinion" (id. at 3773); and
19 Cinquegrani sent memoranda and drafts to Shapiro, who forwarded them to Coplan and Nissenbaum
20 (see
id. at 3751-54, 3769-70). Cinquegrani sent summaries of the conclusions to be included in the
21 requested opinion letter, and drafts of proposed fact sections--based on "assumed" facts, as there were
22 no PICO clients at the time (id. at 3752-53)--to support the already-reached legal conclusions (see
id.
14
1 at 3750-54;
id. at 3761 ("by the time [Cinquegrani] drafted [this] facts section," the PICO opinion
2 letter "was largely in its final form").)
3 After receiving Cinquegrani's draft of the fact section, Shapiro sent Cinquegrani an
4 e-mail listing economic-substance representations that had been made in connection with a different
5 transaction, stating that he was sending them for discussion purposes "as to tone, etc., not specifically
6 for content." (GX 653 (Shapiro e-mail dated August 7, 2000 (bold in original)).) Shapiro's first four
7 sample representations referred to "substantial non-tax" business purposes for the transaction; and the
8 last stated that "[i]nvestor has reviewed the description of the transactions contained in the Letter and
9 such description is accurate and complete, and there are no pertinent facts relating to the Transactions
10 that have not been set forth in such description"; but Shapiro's samples said nothing about the
11 transaction's tax ramifications. (Id.) Cinquegrani testified that he added some of Shapiro's sample
12 representations to the ensuing version of the PICO opinion (see Tr. 3777); the substance of two
13 Shapiro samples asserting non-tax business purposes appeared as client representations in
14 Cinquegrani's opinion letter (see, e.g., GX 663).
15 Cinquegrani testified that he knew he was drafting a document that was misleading as
16 to the true purpose of the PICO transaction and that he was engaged in wrongdoing. (See Tr. 3761.)
17 For example, the fact description began by stating that the LLC "is offering qualified investors ('the
18 investors') the opportunity to create a special purpose investment management company to capitalize
19 on [the LLC's] expertise in the foreign exchange markets and general investment management
20 services"; Cinquegrani testified that that was not an accurate statement because "the real reason for
21 offering this vehicle, which is the PICO, is to provide tax losses for investors." (Id. at 3754-56.) The
22 description contained other false or misleading statements as well (see
id. at 3756-61), because
23 although PICO was designed "[t]o make available to the investor significant losses" (id. at 3758),
15
1 Cinquegrani's "intention was to describe the transaction as much as possible as an ordinary business
2 deal and to downplay all the tax aspects" (id. at 3756), "deemphasizing wherever possible tax
3 benefits" (id. at 3760). No one at E&Y expressed any concerns about the language of the letter. (See
4
id. at 3761.)
5 In sum, Cinquegrani testified that there was a "cover story element to the beginning
6 of the opinion that misleads about what the transaction is all about" (Tr. 4015) and that the opinion
7 letter contained statements that were false and misleading (see
id. at 3754-81), indeed, "wildly
8 misleading" (id. at 3779). Cinquegrani was asked why he did not tell "Shapiro" and others that the
9 opinion letter contained a false cover story. (Id. at 4021.) Cinquegrani testified that he "didn't feel
10 a need to say, oh, by the way, the stuff we are writing doesn't really reflect what's really going on,"
11 because "the key players, that you mentioned, Mr. Shapiro [and others], they all participated in
12 creating the story." (Tr. 4021-22.)
13 4. Nissenbaum
14 Nissenbaum too was a core member of the SISG Group headed by Coplan. (See
15 Tr. 2135-37, 2236.) I disagree with the Majority's view that the evidence was insufficient to permit
16 a reasonable inference that Nissenbaum knew of and participated in the conspiracy to impede the IRS
17 in the performance of its lawful functions.
18 As the above discussion of Shapiro reveals, Nissenbaum too received numerous
19 e-mails from Coplan, as well as several from Shapiro, urging concealment of facts that were material
20 to the tax-minimization or tax-elimination goals of the COBRA, CDS, Add-On, and PICO shelters.
16
1 These included:
2 - Coplan's July 17, 2001 e-mail, GX 555, ordering retention of documents "supporting
3 the economic purpose and bona fide nature of the investment in the [COBRA]
4 transaction" (emphasis added), along with legal opinions and documents relating to
5 the currency trades, but ordering the immediate deletion and disposition of any other
6 materials related to COBRA;
7 - Coplan's July 23, 2001 e-mail, GX 602, about a "PICO Materials Leak," stressing
8 that leaking "of the materials to . . . the government WOULD have calamitous results";
9 - Shapiro's February 8, 2000 e-mail on CDS, GX 66, "seriously" "question[ing]"
10 whether the "[c]learly . . . necessary" "fact that our swap will be terminated early"
11 should be included in "a document";
12 - Shapiro's April 14, 2000 e-mail on CDS, GX 100, terming it "essential" that the
13 statements that "'Calculations assume utilization of the Early Termination Provision'"
14 "be deleted" from the model documents;
15 - Coplan's July 1, 2000 e-mail, GX 144, stating--despite the fact that liquidation of the
16 interest in the LLC was in fact a step that was required in order to achieve the planned
17 tax benefits--that Coplan had "softened the" Add-On announcement letters' "reference
18 to the liquidation of the interest in the LLC so it sounds less like an event that we
19 know will happen in the near future."
20 I see nothing that required the jury to regard Nissenbaum as a disinterested recipient
21 of random e-mails. These were communications sent to him as a core member of the SISG group,
22 which prepared presentations, prepared templates for letters to and for clients, and prepared templates
23 for responses to IRS inquiries. Plainly Nissenbaum did review e-mails sent to him with regard to
24 letters to be sent to the IRS in seeking amnesty. With regard to PICO, Dougherty testified that he
25 prepared a disclosure letter using an "amnesty template . . . coming from Mr. Nissenbaum" (Tr. 1761;
26 see
id. at 1317-18); and that template did not "disclos[e] all the [taxpayer's] motives" for entering into
27 the transaction (id. at 1762) and did not "mention the primary motivation of deferring and reducing
28 taxes" (id. at 1761). Nissenbaum approved the letter (prepared from his template) without substantive
29 change as "Good to go" (GX 583 (Nissenbaum e-mail dated April 18, 2002); see also Tr. 1641). With
17
1 regard to Add-On, Coplan solicited--and received--comments from Nissenbaum on the proposed
2 amnesty template (which adopted misstatements in the opinion letters received by E&Y clients, the
3 opinion letters, in turn, having been prepared from the form representation letters for the clients (see,
4 e.g., GX 786 (e-mail dated March 30, 2001, from Brent Clifton, attorney who wrote Add-On opinion
5 letters, to Shapiro, Coplan, and Nissenbaum); Tr. 2486-88)). The amnesty letter templates did not
6 disclose the taxpayer's actual motive, i.e., tax-elimination. Nissenbaum's only suggestion was to
7 eliminate some investment details; otherwise, he said, "[t]he disclosure looks fine to me" (GX 491
8 (Nissenbaum e-mail dated March 5, 2002, to Coplan and Shapiro); see Tr. 4663).
9 Nor can it reasonably be argued that Nissenbaum did not realize the import of any of
10 these nondisclosures. In March 2000, when he became aware that a regional E&Y tax department
11 employee had sent to some 18 other tax department employees a Power Point presentation describing
12 an SISG tax shelter, Nissenbaum instructed the director of that region to "make it clear" that "nothing
13 from SISG is to be circulated this widely" (GX 94 (Nissenbaum e-mail dated March 22, 2000
14 (emphasis in original))). Nissenbaum stated, "This could shut this down sooner than sending the
15 PowerPoint to the IRS!" (Id.)
16 B. The Convictions of Shapiro and Nissenbaum on Counts Two and Three
17 Counts Two and Three of the superseding indictment charged Shapiro and Nissenbaum
18 with substantive offenses, to wit, attempted tax evasion in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7201 in connection
19 with the Add-On tax shelter. Section 7201 prohibits "any conduct, the likely effect of which would
20 be to mislead or to conceal," Spies v. United States,
317 U.S. 492, 499 (1943). The jury was
21 instructed, inter alia, that it could find defendants guilty of these substantive offenses on the basis of
22 the principle established in Pinkerton v. United States,
328 U.S. 640 (1946), that when the evidence
18
1 establishes that a conspiracy existed, a member of the conspiracy may be held liable for all acts of
2 wrongdoing performed by other coconspirators during the course of and in furtherance of the
3 conspiracy, see
id. at 646-47.
4 Coplan and Vaughn were convicted of the conspiracy alleged in Count One and of the
5 substantive tax evasion offenses alleged in Counts Two and Three. Given the evidence that supports
6 the convictions of Shapiro and Nissenbaum of the Count One conspiracy, discussed in Part A above,
7 the jury could easily find that the tax evasions by Coplan and Vaughn were in furtherance of the
8 conspiracy and were foreseeable to Shapiro and Nissenbaum. I would thus uphold the verdicts against
9 Shapiro and Nissenbaum on Counts Two and Three on the Pinkerton theory.
10 The Majority rejects the applicability of the Pinkerton theory "[f]or substantially the
11 reasons that" the Majority would reverse the convictions of Shapiro and Nissenbaum for conspiracy,
12 Majority Opinion ante at 32-34. That is, the Majority views the evidence as insufficient to permit the
13 inference that Shapiro and Nissenbaum knew of and participated in the Count One conspiracy, i.e.,
14 that they were in fact members of the conspiracy.
15 In my view, the evidence discussed in Part A above was ample to permit the jury to
16 infer that Shapiro and Nissenbaum knew of and participated in the proven conspiracy. Each was a
17 core member of SISG, the tax-shelter-marketing arm of E&Y; they received numerous e-mails,
18 principally from Coplan, cautioning against allowing E&Y materials marketing those shelters to fall
19 into the hands of "the IRS." And similar warnings were explicitly issued by Shapiro and Nissenbaum
20 themselves. The numerous warnings and stated goal to maintain sanitized files need not themselves
21 have been unlawful in order to show, as they did, that Shapiro and Nissenbaum were fully aware of
22 the efforts to conceal the tax purposes of these shelters from the IRS. And the evidence was sufficient
23 to permit the jury to infer that Shapiro and Nissenbaum engaged in misleading conduct that was
19
1 plainly unlawful. Shapiro, for example, not only discussed with Dougherty false statements that they
2 could proffer to the IRS in connection with the audit of the WRB Lake partners but also attended the
3 IRS interview at which Dougherty told such "lie[s]." And both Shapiro and Nissenbaum reviewed
4 and approved form letters to be submitted by E&Y clients to the IRS, in support of amnesty, that
5 proffered business purposes, did not disclose the tax-reduction or tax-elimination motivation, and
6 stated that no pertinent facts were undisclosed. In sum, I conclude that the evidence was sufficient
7 to support the convictions of Shapiro and Nissenbaum of conspiracy as charged in Count One and of
8 the substantive offenses charged in Counts Two and Three.
20