ROVNER, Circuit Judge.
At the conclusion of an eleven-week trial, a jury convicted defendants Michael A. Vallone, William S. Cover, Michael T. Dowd, Robert W. Hopper, Timothy S. Dunn, and Edward Bartoli of conspiring to defraud the United States by impeding and impairing the functions of the Internal Revenue Service ("IRS") and to commit offenses against the United States, along with related fraud and tax offenses. They were sentenced to prison terms ranging from 120 to 223 months. The defendants appeal their convictions and sentences. We affirm.
This is the latest in a series of cases arising out of abusive trusts promoted by The Aegis Company ("Aegis") and its sister company, Heritage Assurance Group ("Heritage"), both based in Palos Hills, Illinois. See United States v. Wasson, 679 F.3d 938 (7th Cir.2012); United States v. Hills, 618 F.3d 619 (7th Cir.2010), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 131 S.Ct. 2958, 180 L.Ed.2d 249, ___ U.S. ___, 132 S.Ct. 130, 181 L.Ed.2d 51 (2011); United States v. Patridge, 507 F.3d 1092 (7th Cir.2007); United States v. Baxter, 217 Fed.Appx. 557 (7th Cir.2007); Muhich v. C.I.R., 238 F.3d 860 (7th Cir.2001); Bartoli v. Richmond, 215 F.3d 1329, 2000 WL 687155 (7th Cir.2000); see also United States v. Richardson, 681 F.3d 736 (6th Cir.2012); United States v. Welti, 446 Fed.Appx. 784 (6th Cir.2012); United States v. Ellefsen, 655 F.3d 769 (8th Cir.2011); Richardson v. C.I.R., 509 F.3d 736 (6th Cir.2007); United States v. Diesel, 238 Fed.Appx. 398 (10th Cir.2007); United States v. Tiner, 152 Fed. Appx. 891 (11th Cir.2005).
Heritage was formed in 1990 by Michael Richmond as the Illinois offshoot of a like-named California firm. Defendants Michael Vallone and Robert Hopper joined the staff of Heritage shortly thereafter. Defendant Edward Bartoli, an attorney with degrees from both Notre Dame and Harvard, later became affiliated with Heritage as its legal counsel. Heritage was in the business of selling living trusts for estate planning purposes. These trusts were marketed to customers through a network of cooperating insurance agents. In 1993, Bartoli put forward the idea of a package of business, family, and charitable trusts that could be marketed to customers as a means of both estate planning and income tax minimization. Bartoli thought that such a package could command a price of $25,000 or more. Vallone and Hopper were amenable to the idea and joined Bartoli in bringing his idea to fruition. They began to promote the concept of a multi-trust system at training sessions that Heritage sponsored for its cooperating insurance agents, and eventually began to sell some trust packages to Heritage clients. By early 1994, however, Vallone and Hopper had fallen out with Richmond and forced him out of Heritage, accusing him of embezzlement. Along with Bartoli, they decided to form a new company, Aegis, to take over marketing of the multi-trust system. Aegis was formed later that same year, and it began to sell multi-trust systems as a way for high-income individuals to minimize their income taxes. Aegis and Heritage continued to share the same building in Palos Hills, a Chicago suburb, as their headquarters.
Although the Aegis system of trusts was portrayed as a legitimate, sophisticated means of tax minimization grounded in the common law, the system was in essence a sham, designed solely to conceal a trust purchaser's assets and income from the IRS, thereby reducing his apparent tax liability and defrauding the United States of revenue to which it was entitled. Pursuant to the Aegis system, "customers appeared to sell their assets to several trusts when, in fact, customers never really ceded control of their assets." Hills, 618 F.3d at 624.
The trusts were marketed to and implemented for customers across the United States through a network of corrupt promoters, managers, attorneys, and accountants. Although prospective customers who bothered to seek independent advice as to the legitimacy of the Aegis system were routinely warned of its flaws, greed led many to overlook the system's "too good to be true" attributes. Between 1994 and 2003, some 650 individuals purchased Aegis trust packages, at prices ranging
The defendants in this case include the progenitors of the Aegis trust along with some of its major promoters. Vallone was the executive director of Aegis; Bartoli, who came up with the idea of the trust system, was the firm's first legal director until 1996, and continued to help manage Aegis thereafter; and Hopper served as the firm's managing director. In 1995, these three, along with Timothy Shawn Dunn, created Aegis Management Company ("Aegis Management") to provide trust management services and tax advice to individuals who purchased the Aegis trusts. Dunn, a certified financial planner, was a promoter as well as a manager of Aegis trusts; he became the executive director of Aegis Management. William Cover, like Dunn, was a promoter and manager of Aegis trusts. He served as the president of Sigma Resource Management, Inc. and later held the controlling interest in Sigma Resource Management, LLC (collectively, "Sigma"), which also provided management services to purchasers of Aegis trusts. Vallone and Michael Dowd served as directors and officers of Sigma. Dowd came to work at the Palos Hills offices of Heritage and Aegis in 1997, after earning a degree in business finance. In addition to assisting the Aegis principals, Dowd provided management services to trust purchasers through both Aegis and Sigma. David Parker, a New York attorney, served as the legal director of Aegis Management. He assisted in the promotion and management of Aegis trusts as well as the defense of the trust system from government inquiries. John Stambulis, an Illinois attorney, worked in the Palos Hills office of Aegis, and assisted with the creation and defense of Aegis trusts. Both Parker and Stambulis would later plead guilty and testify against the remaining defendants at trial.
The Aegis trusts were typically marketed to wealthy, self-employed individuals whose income could not be easily traced through the W-2 forms that are issued to ordinary taxpayers. Aegis representatives, including the defendants, conducted seminars promoting the Aegis trusts in cities around the country. Attendance at these seminars was by invitation only, and guests were charged between $150 and $500 to participate. Attendees were told at such seminars that use of the Aegis trust system would reduce if not eliminate their federal income taxes. They were often given materials that purported to document the legitimacy of the system with seemingly thorough and impressive citations to the various legal authorities that supported the trusts. But as one lawyer wrote to a client who sought his advice as to the legitimacy of the system:
The typical Aegis system comprised multiple domestic trusts, including a business trust, an asset management trust, and a charitable trust. (As we shall explain in a moment, foreign trusts were also used in many instances to further conceal an individual's assets and income.) The centerpiece of the system was the business trust, also referred to as a "common law business organization" or "CBO." The business trust was purportedly modeled after the Massachusetts Business Trust, a non-statutory arrangement by which ownership of a business is transferred to a trust in exchange for certificates of beneficial interest; the trustee then holds and manages the business on behalf of the holders of those certificates. See Navarro Sav. Ass'n v. Lee, 446 U.S. 458, 468-69, 100 S.Ct. 1779, 1785-86, 64 L.Ed.2d 425 (1980) (quoting Hecht v. Malley, 265 U.S. 144, 146-47, 44 S.Ct. 462, 463, 68 L.Ed. 949 (1924)) (describing Massachusetts Business Trust). A key point distinguishing the Aegis business trust (along with the other trusts making up the Aegis system) is that an independent trustee never assumed any real control over the trust assets. With the aid of Aegis personnel, a purchaser nominally would transfer his assets — including his businesses and residence — to one or more trusts and formally cede control of those assets to the named trustee, typically Bartoli, Parker, or Stambulis. But routinely, within a few days after the trust was first established — and sometimes before the client had even transferred assets to the trust — the Aegis attorney would resign by means of a boilerplate letter citing "circumstances beyond [his] control," and appoint the client as his replacement. E.g., R. 917 Tr. 3495-96; R. 921 Tr. 5408-09; R. 965 Tr. 306. Because the purchaser thus retained control over the assets assigned to the trusts, the transfer of those assets into the trust amounted to nothing more than a paper transaction with no economic substance.
That the Aegis trust system was a fraudulent scheme was borne out in the manner in which the underlying documentation was prepared. We have noted, for example, that the purportedly independent trustee named in the creation of the trust routinely would resign shortly after the trust was created and be replaced by the client on whose behalf the trust was created. Typically the boilerplate resignation letter was prepared and signed at the same time as the paperwork creating the trust, although it was dated several days later, leaving no doubt that the resignation of the initial, "independent" trustee was
The income that Aegis clients derived from their businesses was also diverted to the trusts by means of management and consulting contracts between the clients' businesses and their trusts, an arrangement that Aegis personnel suggested and helped to implement. Ostensibly, pursuant to such a contract, a trust would provide services to the client's business, for which the business would in turn compensate the trust. In actuality, the trust would provide no services to the business, although the business would compensate the trust and write the payments off as an expense. The actual purpose of these contracts was thus to conceal the diversion of business profits to the trusts without the payment of taxes on that income. See Ellefsen, supra, 655 F.3d at 775, 779-80.
The money that Aegis clients transferred to their trusts would be returned to the clients and their businesses in a variety of ways. In some instances, the trusts would make fictitious loans to the client or his business. In other instances, charitable trusts were used to pay for things that really had nothing to do with the stated aims of those trusts. For example, a charitable trust might pay hundreds of thousands of dollars to purchase a primary residence or vacation home for the Aegis customer, on the theory that the home would serve as the "world headquarters" of the trust. R. 943 Tr. 207, 222. Similarly, the charitable trust might pay for a family vacation trip on the theory that one of the purposes of the trip was to visit charitable enterprises to which the trust might make donations.
Tax returns were prepared for the Aegis trust purchasers and for the trusts themselves, but these too were fraudulent in multiple respects. First, Aegis clients were advised by the defendants to assign their own income to the trusts despite the fact that the income was being earned and controlled by the clients just as it had been before the trusts were created. Second, clients were advised to report that assigned income on certain trust tax returns, but then to pass the income on to other trusts without taxes being paid on that income. The result was that the income remained in the clients' hands, but the tax liability was transferred elsewhere. Third, the defendants encouraged clients to claim various deductions on the trusts' federal tax returns that had no basis in law or fact. For example, clients were told to deduct their household utility and other expenses on the theory that their homes were the "world headquarters" of their trusts. College tuition for clients' children was likewise posited as a trust expense based on the notion that the children would one day become directors of the trusts.
The wealthiest Aegis clients were advised to participate in an offshore trust system employing foreign trusts and so-called "international business companies" (IBCs) in Belize. Belize was chosen as the locus for the offshore system because it was not particularly cooperative with the United States on issues related to asset-hiding
As with the domestic trusts, foreign trusts and IBCs were established in such a way as to create the illusion that they were not under the control of Aegis clients. Jenkins would designate certain foreign entities to serve as the nominal directors, trustees, and protectors of these trusts or IBCs. For example, Freedom Services Company, an entity directed by Vallone, was often named as a trust protector (whose job it was to oversee the trustee), and a second company controlled by Jenkins was typically named as trustee. Meanwhile, Aegis clients were given undated letters of resignation from Vallone and Jenkins so that control of the trusts and IBCs at all times remained with them. Offshore accounts in Antigua were established in the names of these Belizean trusts and IBCs, and these accounts too were in reality under the control of the Aegis clients.
To effect the concealment of his income using the offshore trust system, an Aegis client was advised to first transfer his untaxed income to a trust bank account in the United States. From there, the money would be transferred to a bank account in Antigua that was held in the name of a foreign trust. The money was then transferred again to a second bank account, this one in the name of an IBC. The transfer of funds between domestic and foreign trusts often was characterized as a loan, evidenced by one or more promissory notes. Because the transfer of funds from one trust account to another was simply a means of hiding the client's funds from the IRS, these notes were a fiction. But to give them a patina of legitimacy, Aegis clients were advised that periodic demands should be made on the notes and, in turn, relatively small repayments (say, $10,000) should be made on the outstanding "loans."
Once a client's funds had been transferred to the IBC's bank account, the money could be repatriated to the client in the United States in one of several ways. The client would be given a credit card linked to the IBC account in Antigua, which card he could use to access his money, either by making purchases using that card or by receiving cash advances through Automated Teller Machines (ATMs) in the United States. Because the card was linked to an offshore account, there would be no record of these transactions clearing in the United States. The IBC could also make fictitious "loans" or "gifts" of deposited funds to the client.
No taxes were paid on income diverted through the offshore trust system. Aegis clients were assured that the IRS would not have access to offshore trust and bank records and would never be able to link the clients to the control of the IBCs or the bank accounts linked to those IBCs. The system worked to the benefit of the defendants as well: they could receive transaction fees equal to two or three percent of any funds funneled through the offshore trusts.
The services that the defendants provided to Aegis clients did not end with the establishment of the various trusts. The defendants also provided clients with assistance on two fronts in an effort to ensure that the goal of tax evasion was accomplished
As the trusts were a sham, Aegis insisted that clients use pre-selected tax return preparers whom the defendants knew would both conceal the true nature of the tax-avoidance scheme and help to perpetuate it by preparing returns consistent with the purpose of that scheme. Vallone, Dunn, and Cover each assisted clients and their tax preparers in preparing their personal, business, and trust tax returns. Copies of the tax returns filed on behalf of many Aegis clients were later found in the defendants' offices.
By the mid-1990s, the IRS was aware that Aegis and other organizations were promoting various forms of trusts as a means of income tax evasion, and it began to step up its efforts to combat the abuse of trusts for this purpose. It formally signaled its focus on abusive trusts in April 1997, with the issuance of IRS Notice 97-24, available at 1997 WL 187852. The notice explained that it was "intended to alert taxpayers about certain trust arrangements that purport to reduce or eliminate federal taxes in ways that are not permitted by federal tax law." Notice 97-24 at 1. The notice went on to cite five examples of potentially abusive tax arrangements, among them the business trust. Id. at 2. It explained that a common feature of an abusive trust is that the original owner of the assets nominally subject to the trust retains the authority to cause the financial benefits of those assets to be returned to or made available to himself. Id. at 1-2. The notice also summarized the key legal principles applicable to trusts and tax liability, including firstly the point that "[s]ubstance — not form — controls taxation," such that abusive trust arrangements may be treated as shams for tax purposes. Id. at 3. It also noted:
Id. at 3. As we discuss in greater detail below, the Aegis principals were aware of Notice 97-24: Vallone, for example, acknowledged that Aegis received multiple copies of the notice (along with client inquiries) soon after it was issued by the IRS. R. 921 Tr. 5434. Yet, the notice did not cause the firm to stop promoting Aegis trusts; instead, as we discuss below, it triggered efforts to avoid and/or obstruct IRS inquiry into the trusts.
In fact, even before it issued Notice 97-24, the IRS was already quietly investigating Aegis. Michael Priess, then a Special Agent with the Criminal Investigation Division of the IRS, was among several agents who participated in an undercover investigation of Aegis that began in 1996. Priess posed as Mike Jordan, an investment adviser whose clients were mostly physicians. After attending an Aegis seminar in June 1996 at the Oak Lawn Hilton in suburban Chicago, Priess and another agent met with Dunn in 1997 to discuss the possibility of purchasing an Aegis package that would include an offshore trust. After attending two additional Aegis seminars — an October 1997 seminar in New York and a January 1998 seminar in Belize — Priess met again with Dunn in July 1998 to confirm that he was interested in purchasing an offshore trust package. During that meeting, Dunn assured Priess that he would surrender control of the assets he placed into the trust system for only about five minutes before the initial
After the trust system was established, Priess (as Jordan) set about with Dunn's help to use the system to divert profits from his (fictitious) business into the trusts. A contract was prepared between Jordan's business (Cumberland Investment Group) and the CBO (Jordan Business Company Trust) pursuant to which the CBO purportedly would provide management services to the business. The fee that the CBO would charge for these services was pegged at the amount of money Jordan expected his business to realize in profits that year — initially $220,000 and later $290,000. In reality, the CBO would provide no services at all to Jordan's investment business, but the business would pay the fee to the business trust as a cover for the diversion of the business's profits; the business trust would then transfer the fee to the asset management trust, which would in turn convey the fee to the offshore trust, which would then transfer the fee to the IBC. Priess posed a wrinkle to Dunn: he (Jordan) did not have $290,000 on hand to pay the CBO its "fee." Dunn helped Priess come up with a "Plan B": Jordan's business would make an initial payment of $185,000 to the CBO; that money would then be transferred among the various trusts into the bank account of the IBC in Antigua; then $105,000 of that money would be repatriated to Jordan from the IBC account to Jordan as a "gift"; Jordan would then send that $105,000 back into the trust system by writing a check for $106,400 to Fructus International Trust in purported repayment (with interest) of a $105,000 "loan" that Fructus had made previously. These machinations added a new level of deceit to the charade of the management fee, making it appear as though Jordan's business ultimately paid the entire "fee" of $290,000, when in fact part of that total
Priess subsequently had conversations with both Cover and Vallone at a February 1999 Aegis seminar in Cleveland about the way in which he had repatriated the $105,000 from the Belizean IBC to himself as a "gift." Cover, who told Priess that he was managing trusts from some fifty Aegis clients, warned Priess that bringing money back into the United States as a gift from the IBC was risky, as he would owe tax on the portion of any gift in excess of $10,000. Cover suggested to Priess that he bring back the remainder of the $290,000 sent abroad as a "loan." Cover also mentioned to Priess that he (Cover) used a credit card linked to his own offshore IBC account to obtain cash from that account. "I go to the Cash Station every week and pull out $400," he told the agent. Priess Tr. 42; R. 944 Tr. 409; R. 966 Tr. 688. When Priess raised the same subject with Vallone over lunch, Vallone had a different idea. Vallone suggested that Priess could still use a "gift" as the means of repatriating money from the Belizean entities, so long as he named a nominee director to the offshore bank accounts linked to the international trust and the IBC. That way, Vallone explained, Priess could say he had nothing to do with the "gift" if ever questioned by the IRS.
Priess's experience with the Aegis system documented most of the tax-evasive aspects of the Aegis scheme: a chain of connected trusts that, on paper, accomplished the transfer of client income abroad and assigned the income tax liability to an IBC, where it would effectively disappear; the designation of nominally independent trustees whose immediate resignation was planned for before the client signed the trust paperwork; the backdating of documents; the preparation of minutes to reflect fictitious meetings of the trusts' boards of directors (e.g., Parker's telephonic meeting with himself); the use of bogus management services contracts to facilitate the transfer of a client's business profits into the trust system; the repatriation of funds diverted to the offshore trust and IBC back to the client in the United States through fictitious loans and gifts; and the reality that for the Aegis client, all of these transactions and events occurred on paper only, without altering the operation of their businesses, control of their assets, or access to their money.
After the IRS signaled its interest in abusive trust arrangements with the issuance of Notice 97-24 in 1997, the defendants created what they referred to as the "Aegis Audit Arsenal." This so-called arsenal was basically a series of obstructionist measures that the defendants encouraged Aegis clients to use, and in some instances aided their clients in using, to thwart IRS inquiries into the use of Aegis trusts. For example, the defendants encouraged clients to withhold information from IRS agents, to respond to IRS inquiries and requests for the production of financial records with non-responsive letters and questionnaires drafted by defendants, and to file frivolous motions to quash summonses issued by the IRS. In some instances, attorneys Parker and Stambulis sent letters drafted by Vallone to the IRS on behalf of Aegis clients. A nine-page letter that Parker sent to the IRS in November 1999 on behalf of Aegis client Genevieve Riccordino, a real estate broker, exemplifies the nature of this correspondence.
Early in 2000, the defendants also created the Washington, D.C., law firm of Parker & Associates, which was owned by Parker and Hopper, to represent Aegis clients during IRS audits and examinations. The law firm served the dual function of helping to implement the Audit Arsenal's goal of obstruction and to generate additional fees from Aegis clients.
In a particularly brazen move, several of the defendants filed lawsuits against both the IRS and a number of its revenue and special agents, among others. Bartoli, Vallone, Hopper, and Dunn filed one such suit on May 8, 1997, in the Northern District of Illinois against (among others) IRS Revenue Agent James Pogue and the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission ("ARDC"), which had initiated disciplinary proceedings against Bartoli based on his involvement with the trusts sold by both Heritage and Aegis. (We shall have more to say about the ARDC proceeding below.) That suit was assigned to Judge Plunkett who, after dismissing most of the defendants and granting summary judgment to Pogue, imposed Rule 11 sanctions on the four plaintiffs for filing a frivolous lawsuit. See Fed.R.Civ.P. 11. His sanctions opinion, which we later affirmed and adopted on appeal, observed:
Bartoli v. A.R.D.C. of Ill., 1999 WL 1045210, at *3 (N.D.Ill. Nov. 12, 1999) (citations omitted), aff'd sub nom. Bartoli v. Richmond, supra, 2000 WL 687155. In May 2001, Vallone, Aegis, and Heritage also filed a class-action suit against the IRS and three of its agents (among other defendants) in the Southern District of Illinois, seeking damages of $556 billion for purported violations of the plaintiffs' civil rights. That action was dismissed as devoid of merit in June 2003.
Judge Plunkett's November 1999 ruling in the Bartoli case was an unmistakable rejection of the legitimacy of the Aegis trusts, but in fact the defendants were on notice long before his ruling that the Aegis system was contrary to longstanding rules governing trusts and taxation. Prospective clients of Aegis who received warnings as to the legitimacy of the system from their own lawyers and accountants frequently forwarded the negative opinions to Aegis personnel; copies of such opinions were later discovered in the files at Aegis headquarters. We quoted earlier from one such opinion letter, which noted that the Aegis materials distributed at promotional seminars purporting to document the legality of the system were "full of errors, irrelevancies and partial truths followed by non sequiturs." Gov't Ex. Dunn Office 32, R. 962 Tr. 3395. We also noted that when Priess (posing as Mike Jordan) reported his own accountant's description
IRS Notice 97-24, issued in April 1997, reiterated the ways in which abusive trusts akin to those promoted by Aegis violated longstanding and well-known legal principles. This notice, as we have discussed was well-known to the Aegis principals, and copies of the notice were found in the Aegis headquarters.
Then in June 1999, the United States Tax Court issued its decision in Muhich v. C.I.R., 1999 WL 390695 (U.S. Tax Court June 14, 1999), holding that a multi-trust system that Bartoli had sold to Frank and Virginia Muhich through Heritage was a sham lacking in economic substance that should be disregarded for tax purposes. Mr. and Mrs. Muhich owned a family photography business. They purchased a trust package from Heritage in 1994 after meeting with Bartoli; they subsequently engaged Aegis to help operate the trusts. The Muhichs' system ultimately comprised five trusts, including an asset management trust, a business trust, a charitable trust, an equity trust, and a vehicle trust. Bartoli served as the initial trustee of the asset management trust, which was formed first, and following Bartoli's resignation as the initial trustee, the Muhichs became the sole trustees and beneficiaries of that and the other four trusts. Most of the Muhich's assets were assigned to the asset management trust, including Mr. Muhich's right to receive compensation for his services. Once the trusts were in place, Mr. Muhich ran the family business just as he did before. In lieu of paying a salary to him, however, the business paid the asset management trust for his services, calling the payments "consulting fees." The Muhichs, as officers of the asset management trust, assumed responsibility for managing the trust's affairs, and as compensation for their services, the trust "agreed" to pay the family's housing, transportation, health care, and other expenses. The asset management trust, of course, claimed deductions for those expenses; and any net income remaining after the deduction of those expenses was transferred to the charitable trust. The asset management trust thus reported zero taxable income, and the charitable trust (which made only modest charitable contributions) claimed exemption from taxation. The other trusts reported no income whatsoever. On the returns that the Muhichs themselves filed for 1994 and 1995, they reported no income in the form of compensation.
The IRS determined that the trust arrangement was an abusive one that should be disregarded for tax purposes, and the Tax Court agreed. The court found that the trusts lacked any economic substance apart from tax considerations. The court pointed out that (1) the Muhichs' relationship with their property did not change ("the Muhichs could manipulate, distribute, or otherwise use trust property at their whim") (2) the trusts lacked an independent trustee ("[t]he fact that Bartoli served as a trustee for a limited time is meaningless; it was a paper appointment solely for the purpose of facilitating the creation of the trust scheme"); (3) "no economic interest in the trusts ever passed to anyone other than the Muhichs"; and (4) the Muhichs were not bound by any restrictions as to the use of trust property. Id., at *6-*7. The court noted that, overall, "the tangled web" of trusts did little more than conceal who really owned the assets and who earned the income assigned to the trusts. Id., at *7.
Id. (footnotes omitted). This decision to treat the trusts as a sham meant that the business income that had been diverted to the trusts would instead be treated as income to the Muhichs on which they would owe tax. The court went on to hold the Muhichs liable for a penalty equal to twenty percent of the amount of income they had underpaid in the relevant tax years based on their negligence in under-reporting their income. Id., at *10-*11; see 26 U.S.C. § 6662(a) and (b)(1). In imposing that penalty, the court rejected the Muhichs' contention that they had reasonably relied on the advice of Bartoli, among others, as to the legitimacy of the trusts. "Bartoli's bias was obvious, and his ability to benefit financially by luring individuals into the scheme should have sent up a red flag. Petitioner is an experienced businessman who should have been suspicious of Bartoli's claims." Id., at *11. The court opted not to impose an additional penalty on the Muhichs under 26 U.S.C. § 6673(a)(1) for asserting a frivolous or groundless position in response to the IRS's claims. The court agreed that the Muhichs' contention that the trusts had economic substance indeed was frivolous; it rejected the penalty only because the Muhichs had prevailed on the distinct question whether the "consulting fees" paid by the Muhichs' business to the asset management trust should be included in the Muhichs' income as compensation or constructive dividends. Id.
The Muhichs appealed the Tax Court's decision to this court. We affirmed the Tax Court's holding in January 2001, noting that it was wholly consistent with prior cases rejecting efforts to assign a taxpayer's income and other assets to a trust, treat his personal expenses as deductible costs of trust administration, and avoid paying income taxes on his income.
238 F.3d at 864 (footnote omitted).
The executives of Aegis were keenly aware of the Tax Court's decision in Muhich. The Muhichs may have purchased an early version of a trust system from Heritage (where Bartoli, Vallone, and Hopper developed the concept of a multi-trust package aimed at tax avoidance), but their package of trusts was similar in essential respects to the Aegis system of trusts, and the Muhichs had in fact engaged Aegis to help them operate their trusts. Frank Muhich was spotted in the audience at the first Aegis seminar that Agent Priess attended in 1996, and in the wake of the Tax Court's decision three years later, Hopper remarked to Priess that Muhich "was one of our CBO clients." Priess Tr. 48; R. 944 Tr. 419. There was extensive discussion and correspondence both within Aegis and between Aegis representatives and existing and prospective
The other red flag that signaled official disapproval of the Aegis system came in the form of the disciplinary complaint that the Illinois ARDC filed against Bartoli in November 1996. By this time, Bartoli had resigned as Aegis's legal counsel, assumed inactive status with the Illinois bar, and relocated to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina; but he remained involved in the management of Aegis. The ARDC began investigating Bartoli after Richmond, who had been forced out of Heritage in 1994, complained to the ARDC about Bartoli. The complaint that the ARDC ultimately filed against Bartoli was premised primarily on the assertion that Bartoli had engaged in dishonesty, fraud, and deceit in promoting CBOs as a means of tax avoidance, because the applicable principles of trust, tax, and common law did not recognize the CBO as employed by Heritage, Aegis, and Bartoli as a viable entity. R. 916 Tr. 2652-53. Much like the Muhich litigation, then, the ARDC proceeding directly implicated the legitimacy of the Aegis system of trusts. We shall have more to say about the ARDC proceeding later in this opinion as we discuss an issue with respect to the evidence that the government offered at trial regarding that proceeding. For now it is enough to note that although only Bartoli was named as a respondent in the ARDC proceeding, the defendants were well aware of the proceeding. Vallone and Hopper, in addition to Bartoli, were deposed in the course of that proceeding. Copies of the ARDC documents were later discovered in the Aegis headquarters. And, as we have already noted, four of the defendants filed suit against the ARDC based on its conduct in investigating and charging Bartoli. Ultimately, a Hearing Board of the ARDC issued a Report and Recommendation in February 2000 proposing that Bartoli be disbarred in Illinois based on his conduct in connection with promoting and selling the CBOs. That proposal was adopted by the ARDC's Review Board in December 2001, and Bartoli was formally disbarred by the Illinois Supreme Court in May 2002.
By early 2000, it was apparent to all that the government had both Aegis and the firm's clientele in its sights. Vallone would report in an April 2000 letter to Aegis clients that as of January 2000, some 150 Aegis members had received audit requests from the IRS, although he assured clients that the IRS dropped half of these "after one or two letters from us." Gov't Ex. Priess 26; R. 944 Tr. 435. On March 31, 2000, search warrants were executed at the Aegis headquarters in Palos Hills, Illinois, at Dunn's office in Indiana, and at the offices of other individuals working with the defendants. Both documents and computers were seized during the search, making plain that the government was not only building a case against Aegis and its officials but attempting to identify the firm's
Vallone initiated changes in the trust system in an ongoing effort to keep Aegis clients "off the radar screen" of the IRS. E.g., R. 944 Tr. 452-53, 455; R. 954 Tr. 5501-02. Vallone learned that the government had been able to identify some Aegis clients from the Schedule C forms (used to report income from sole proprietorships) that those clients had attached to their trust tax returns. R. 944 Tr. 438-39. Vallone adopted a new business name — "The Fortress Trust" (which had the same address as the Aegis headquarters) — and under that name promoted a new "Tax Minimization Plan," which employed a different type of trust and a limited liability company, so as to eliminate the type of tax return that called for a Schedule C. Existing Aegis clients were encouraged to switch to the new system — at a cost of several thousand dollars — in order to avoid scrutiny from the IRS. Dunn, in fact, had such a conversation with Agent Priess. Priess, in his role as Aegis client Mike Jordan, had a June 2000 meeting with Dunn in which Priess voiced skepticism whether he had an ongoing need for the services of Aegis Management. Dunn responded that Priess (Jordan) needed those services more than ever "[i]n light of the increased scrutiny and them [the IRS] now having the records" from the March 2000 search. Gov't Ex. Priess Tr. 59; R. 944 Tr. 452. "There are ways to get those same benefits without having to be on the radar screen," Dunn told Priess. Id. Tr. 452.
In the meantime, changes were occurring within Aegis. Hopper resigned as the managing director of the firm in January 2000, although he remained on hand to provide assistance through April. Parker ceased his involvement as counsel in May 2000, after the Muhich decision caused him to seek independent advice as to the legitimacy of the Aegis trusts from three different tax attorneys, who informed him that the trusts were not valid. In May 2000, the same month as Parker's departure, Dowd was named by Vallone to be the operations manager of both Heritage and Aegis. In a letter to Aegis clients announcing (among other events) Harper's departure and Dowd's promotion, Vallone described Dowd's new role as a "purely administrative position, not managerial," but added that Dowd "will greatly help me in carrying on with our operations." Gov't Ex. 27; R. 944 Tr. 450. In June 2000, Dowd, Cover and others joined what was known as the Aegis Advisory Board to counsel Vallone in his management of Aegis and the Fortress Trust.
A discussion of the facts would not be complete without mention of the ways in which the defendants themselves used the Aegis trusts. The defendants not only promoted the Aegis trust system but used that system to hide the substantial income they reaped from sales of trust packages. (From 1997 through 2000, the total incomes earned by each defendant ranged from a low of $142,000 in Dowd's case to a high of $1.5 million in Dunn's case. Collectively, the defendants earned more than $6 million from the sale and management of Aegis trusts over the life of the scheme.) In some cases, the defendants failed to file tax returns at all: Vallone, Bartoli, and Hopper filed no individual tax returns for the years 1997 to 2000, for example. To hide the income they earned from Aegis and other sources, their paychecks were
Like Vallone, Bartoli, and Hopper, Dunn did not file a federal income tax for 1999, although his gross income exceeded $438,000 that year. He did file tax returns for 1997 and 1998, but he reported only modest income of approximately $16,000 and $9,000 for those years, when his actual income exceeded $434,000 and $604,000 respectively. On the income that he failed to report in these three years, Dunn owed taxes totaling more than $315,000.
Dowd and Cover both filed federal income tax returns in 1997 through 2000, but as with Dunn the returns they filed substantially under-reported their actual income. Dowd, for example, reported income of only $3,000 to $6,000 annually, although his gross income in those four years amounted to more than $211,000. He owed $55,000 on the income that he failed to report, while Cover owed an additional $84,000 on the income that he did not report for 1997 through 1999.
Although the doors of Aegis did not close until 2004, the scheme was largely at an end by 2003. By that time, people were being summoned to testify about Aegis to a grand jury. In March 2003, the government conducted a second round of searches which included, among other locations, the Aegis headquarters and Vallone's homes in Illinois and Florida.
The defendants were indicted in April 2004. Count One of the superseding indictment charged all of the defendants with conspiring to defraud the United States by impairing and impeding the functions of the IRS and to commit tax offenses against the United States. 18 U.S.C. § 371. The defendants were also charged with multiple counts of mail fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1341; wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. § 1343; aiding and assisting the filing of false tax returns by others, 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2); filing their own false tax returns, 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1); and tax evasion, 26 U.S.C. § 7201.
After multiple continuances were granted at the requests of one or more of the defendants, an eleven-week trial commenced in February 2008 and concluded in May 2008. The jury convicted Vallone, Bartoli, Hopper, and Cover on all counts in which they were charged. Dunn was convicted on the conspiracy charge and fourteen tax-offense charges, but he was acquitted on nine counts of mail and wire fraud. Dowd was convicted on the conspiracy count, one count of mail fraud, and four counts of filing false tax returns but was acquitted on four mail and wire fraud counts and four counts alleging that he aided and assisted the filing of false tax returns by others.
Each of the defendants was sentenced to a substantial term of imprisonment: Vallone was ordered to serve a prison term of 223 months; Bartoli, 120 months; Hopper, 200 months; Dunn, 210 months; Cover, 160 months; and Dowd, 120 months. All six defendants appeal, raising a multitude of joint and individual issues that we resolve in turn below.
The trial in this case was originally set for June 29, 2004, R. 31, but was continued on multiple occasions thereafter at the request of various defendants. In a number of instances, these continuances were granted over the objection of the government, but at no time did any defense counsel voice an objection to the delays. However, in February 2008, shortly before the trial commenced, defendant Vallone moved to dismiss the indictment, contending that the multiple postponements of the trial date had violated his right to an expeditious trial under the Speedy Trial Act, 18 U.S.C. § 3161, et seq. (the "STA" or the "Act"). R. 408, 411.
As the defendants acknowledge, "certain specified periods of delay are not counted" toward the STA's seventy-day limit. Defendants' Joint Br. 23 (quoting Zedner, 547 U.S. at 492, 126 S.Ct. at 1981); United States v. Wasson, supra, 679 F.3d at 944. One such exception, and the one most on point here, is a continuance of the trial date granted based on the court's finding that "the ends of justice served by taking such action outweigh the best interest of the public and the defendant in a speedy trial." § 3161(h)(7)(A) (formerly § 3161(h)(8)(A) as noted in O'Connor, 656 F.3d at 636 n. 2). The statute identifies a number of factors that the court must consider in deciding whether such a continuance is warranted. § 3161(h)(7)(B); see
The defendants' lead and principal argument on appeal, as it was below, is that the district court did not order the exclusion of time during the time period commencing on February 7, 2007, and ending on May 3, 2007. As the speedy trial clock consequently was running during that period, the defendants reason, the district court was obliged to start the trial no later than April 18, 2007 (seventy days after February 7). The fact that it did not shows that they were deprived of their right to a speedy trial and compelled the district court to grant Vallone's request that the indictment be dismissed. § 3162(a)(2).
We conclude that the defendants have waived this argument. The argument, as we have said, assumes that there was no order at all excluding time between February 7, 2007, and May 3, 2007, such that the speedy trial clock expired in April. This argument overlooks the fact that the court on December 7, 2006, had already continued the trial date from February 7, 2007, on motion of defendants, to October 23, 2007, and had orally excluded time, by agreement. The government relied on the December 7 continuance, and the surrounding context, as adequate to support the exclusion of time under the STA's ends-of-justice provision. It is clear that the court itself relied on what had transpired on December 7 to deny Vallone's motion: the court, after all, read the relevant portion of the December 7 transcript into the record in ruling on the motion. R. 416; R. 1051 at 64. It made the point even more explicitly in its order denying the defendants' post-trial motions for judgments of acquittal, where it noted that it had granted the continuances based on defense counsels' representations regarding the complexity of the case and the length of time needed to prepare for trial. R. 650 at 7-8. So the threshold question presented by the appeal on this issue is whether, as the government and the district court concluded, the December 2006 continuance of the trial date and the accompanying exclusion of time complied with the STA's ends-of-justice provision. (To the extent the defendants presume that exclusion must take the form of a written order, they are mistaken. Our decision in United States v. Napadow, 596 F.3d 398, 405 (7th Cir.2010), leaves no doubt that a written order is not required so long as the district court's oral remarks make clear its intent to exclude time. See also O'Connor, 656 F.3d at 639-40; Adams, 625 F.3d at 380.)
Yet, in their lead brief, the defendants make no mention at all of what took place on December 7, 2006, let alone any argument as to why the court's oral directive that time would be excluded from December 7, 2006, to October 23, 2007, was insufficient to comply with the STA. There can be no reasonable excuse for this omission. The December continuance and exclusion of time was the centerpiece of the government's
The defendants argue secondarily that many of the district court's other orders excluding time based on the ends of justice were not supported by adequate findings; but this argument was waived in the district court. We noted above that although Vallone's motion to dismiss primarily focused on the period from February 7 to May 3, 2007, he also suggested that the district court had not properly excluded other periods of time in the case. The entirety of Vallone's argument in that regard reads as follows:
R. 411 at 6 (citations omitted). Vallone did not cite any particular order as defective, and the sole documentation he provided to the court in support of his motion was the transcript of the February 7, 2007 hearing, which obviously had to do with his primary argument concerning the February 7 to May 3, 2007, period rather than any other period. At the hearing on Vallone's motion, the government's counsel asserted that this second argument was "undeveloped and, therefore, waived." R. 1051 at 57. When Vallone's counsel was given the opportunity to reply to the government's arguments, counsel said nothing to amplify on this second argument nor to contest the government's assertion that it was waived for lack of development. The district court, having been given no grist in support of the argument, never addressed it. Because this was Vallone's motion, because the secondary argument was never fleshed out, and because Vallone's counsel remained silent in the district court in response to the government's contention that the argument had been waived, we find that Vallone indeed did waive it.
All six of the defendants before us were charged, inter alia, with the willful attempt to evade or defeat the federal income taxes owed on their income, either by filing tax returns that substantially understated their income or by filing no tax return at all. R. 103, Counts 35-55; see 26 U.S.C. § 7201. Four of the defendants — Vallone, Bartoli, Hopper, and Dunn — also were charged with willfully aiding and assisting, procuring, counseling, and advising the preparation and presentation of the false and fraudulent income tax returns filed by multiple Aegis clients. R. 103, Counts 11-34; see 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2). In Cheek v. United States, 498 U.S. 192, 201, 111 S.Ct. 604, 610, 112 L.Ed.2d 617 (1991), the Supreme Court noted that the mental state of willfulness, for purposes of section 7201 and other criminal tax laws, demands proof that the defendant knew of a duty imposed on him by the law and that he voluntarily and intentionally violated that duty. The court went on to hold that a defendant's genuine belief that he is not legally required to do a particular act — to report his wages as income to the IRS, for example — is inconsistent with actual knowledge of that obligation, even if his understanding is objectively unreasonable.
Id. at 202, 111 S.Ct. at 610-11.
The over-arching premise of the government's case was that the Aegis trust system was a sham and that the defendants knew as much. The defendants disputed this premise, contending that they in fact
But the defendants contend that the district court undermined their Cheek defense by precluding them from demonstrating to the jury that they had a good-faith belief in the legality of their actions. The problem, as they see it, began with the court's pretrial ruling barring any attempt to show that the trusts were, in fact, a legal means of tax avoidance. By relieving the government of the burden of presenting testimony showing that the trusts violated the law, the court eliminated an opportunity for the defense to question whatever witnesses the government would have called on that subject as to potential ambiguities in the law that might have supported the defendants' purported good faith belief in the legitimacy of the Aegis trusts. The defendants argue that the court later compounded the problem in two ways. First, the court would not allow the defendants to question any government witnesses about purported ambiguities with respect to the tax code and its application to entities like the Aegis trusts. Second, relying on the charge that the defendants had engaged in a conspiracy with one another, the court indicated to counsel that notice to one member of the conspiracy that the trusts were a sham would constitute notice of the same to all other members of the conspiracy. The defendants assert that, collectively, these rulings both prevented the defendants from showing that ambiguities in federal tax law made room for their good-faith belief that the trusts were legitimate and eliminated the government's burden of negating that good faith belief. We take each aspect of this argument in turn, beginning with the court's pretrial ruling as to the legality of the Aegis trust system.
In advance of trial, the government moved in limine to bar the defendants from presenting to the jury any evidence or argument suggesting that the Aegis trust system was a lawful means of tax avoidance. The government noted that this court in a series of decisions had already determined that the Aegis trust system and others like it constituted unlawful tax shelters. R. 314 at 2-3, citing United States v. Patridge, supra, 507 F.3d at 1093-94; Muhich v. C.I.R., supra, 238 F.3d at 861-63; Bartoli v. Richmond, supra, 2000 WL 687155, at *1, *4; Pfluger v. C.I.R., 840 F.2d 1379, 1385-86 (7th Cir. 1988); and Schulz v. C.I.R., 686 F.2d 490, 493-94 (7th Cir.1982).
R. 314 at 3-4 (emphasis in original).
The district court granted the motion. The court acknowledged that the Supreme Court's decision in Cheek required proof that the defendants knew what the Internal Revenue Code required of them. R. 1046 at 90. Nonetheless, "once the Court
R. 1046 at 90-91.
The defendants contend that this ruling, while paying lip service to Cheek, actually precluded them from establishing that they had a good-faith belief in the legality of the Aegis trust system. They maintain that the court's order barred them not only from asserting the legality of the Aegis trusts, but also from "raising the statutes, regulations and case law on which they relied in formulating what they
We do not construe the court's order as the defendants do. The district court was correct in holding that the legality of the Aegis trust system was not a matter for the jury to resolve. This was, instead, a question of law for the court to resolve, e.g., United States v. Caputo, 517 F.3d 935, 942 (7th Cir.2008) ("The only legal expert in a federal courtroom is the judge."), and one which this court, indeed, had already resolved, see Muhich, 238 F.3d at 864; Bartoli, 2000 WL 687155, at *1. It was therefore appropriate to preclude the defendants from attempting to show that the Aegis trust system was legal. See United States v. Cheek, 3 F.3d 1057, 1063 (7th Cir.1993) (sustaining instructions advising jury that certain of defendant's beliefs as to the tax laws were erroneous) (citing United States v. Powell, 955 F.2d 1206, 1213 (9th Cir.1992) (because jury cannot decide legality of particular conduct under tax code, district court must instruct jury that conduct was unlawful)). The district court's order in no way blocked an appropriate Cheek defense, however. The court explicitly recognized that it was the government's burden to prove that the defendants knew what their obligations were under the law. And nothing the court said suggested that it would preclude the defendants from attempting to show why they in good faith believed that the Aegis trust system was a lawful means of tax avoidance under the relevant statutes, regulations, and case law.
To the contrary, the testimony that some of the defendants themselves went on to give demonstrates that they remained free to pursue such a defense, as the government points out. Dowd's testimony is a good example. Dowd explained that his employment with Heritage was his first job after graduating from college. Although he would later assume more significant responsibilities with Aegis, in the beginning Dowd was something of a Man Friday whose responsibilities included a number of menial tasks:
R. 938 Tr. 6377. Dowd was given an asset management trust when he started work with Heritage, which his father (who was familiar with Heritage) told him was "a
The defendants posit, and we may assume arguendo, that expert testimony would be one way in which a defendant charged with tax evasion can establish that he had a good faith, albeit mistaken, belief that his conduct was lawful. Our own decision in United States v. Harris, 942 F.2d 1125, 1132 n. 6 (7th Cir.1991), explicitly recognizes this possibility.
Finally, to the extent the defendants are suggesting that the government's motion and the district court's ruling somehow prevented them from showing that the relevant provisions of the law were ambiguous, see Defendants' Joint Brief at 45-46, they are blurring the distinctions between objective ambiguity in the law and their own purportedly good-faith misinterpretation of the law. As our decision in Harris makes clear, objective ambiguity is a question for the court; and if the court were to find the law objectively ambiguous, that finding would require dismissal of the indictment, as the defendants would not have had appropriate notice that their conduct was illegal. 942 F.2d at 1132 n. 6. Defendants make no argument that the provisions of the Internal Revenue Code and regulations governing trusts are objectively ambiguous.
The defendants next contend that the district court, in a series of evidentiary rulings during the government's case, "eviscerated the government's burden regarding the Cheek defense." Defendants' Joint Br. 48. They point out that the government was allowed to establish, through various exhibits seized during searches of Aegis's office, Vallone's home, Dunn's office, and the offices of certain accountants not charged in this case, that the defendants had notice that the Aegis trust system was not lawful and thus lacked a good faith belief in its legality. By contrast, the defendants argue, when they attempted to establish on cross-examination of the government's witnesses that there was other evidence indicating that the defendants in fact harbored a subjective belief that the Aegis system was lawful, the court barred them from doing so. They posit that the government in effect was allowed to present a one-sided case as to their own subjective understanding of the tax laws.
Our own review of the record convinces us that although the district court prohibited certain questions and the introduction, during the government's case, of exhibits that the defendants believed were favorable to them, it by no means precluded the defendants from presenting a Cheek defense. In virtually all of the cited instances in which the defendants complain that they were not allowed to ask particular questions of a government witness, the court appears to have sustained government objections not on the ground that the questions were not relevant and permissible with respect to the Cheek defense, but on the basis of some wholly independent, and valid, ground. For example, while cross-examining Revenue Agent Paul Ponzo as to why, in calculating the income that a defendant had earned but failed to report, the agent had disallowed reliance on an asset management trust to reduce the defendant's income, Bartoli's counsel sought to question Ponzo about a particular revenue ruling (No. 75-258) and the
As for the court's unwillingness to allow the defense to introduce documents during the government's case which supported their Cheek defense, this is explained by the court's decision to confine defense exhibits to the defense case. See, e.g., R. 947 Tr. 2106-08, 2113-17; R. 969 Tr. 3772-75; R. 935 Tr. 4086-89, 4222-29. As the defendants do not contend that they were prevented from introducing these exhibits in their own case,
Next, the defendants complain that the district court improperly allowed the jury to construe notice to one defendant of the illegality of the Aegis trust system as notice to all of them. The government, as we have noted, relied on various documents — including adverse court rulings as to the legality of the Aegis system — that were found in the offices either of Aegis or one of its officers or employees (or their homes) to show that each of the defendants was aware that the Aegis trusts were not lawful means of tax avoidance and thus was willfully participating in a criminal tax evasion scheme. In a colloquy concerning the notice evidence that occurred fairly early on in the trial, the district court made the following remarks:
R. 949 Tr. 2806-08 (emphasis ours).
Assuming that this was the court's theory, any error in the court's remarks was harmless, because the theory was not communicated to the jury. Certainly we agree that it would be error to instruct the jury that notice to one conspirator that his conduct is illegal — or notice to the conspiracy generally — is, in itself, notice to all members of the conspiracy sufficient to overcome everyone's Cheek defense. See Jefferson v. United States, 340 F.2d 193, 197-98 (9th Cir.1965) (where statute required proof of defendant's specific knowledge that drug was illegally imported, it was plain error to instruct jury that knowledge of any alleged co-conspirator was imputed to all members of conspiracy, thus permitting jury to impute one conspirator's knowledge regarding illegal importation to his co-conspirators, without proof that other conspirators actually knew drug was imported illegally); see also Cheek, 498 U.S. at 202, 111 S.Ct. at 610 ("if the Government proves actual knowledge of the pertinent legal duty, the prosecution, without more, has satisfied the knowledge requirement of the wilfulness requirement") (emphasis ours). But the jury in this case was never so instructed, nor does the record reveal that such a theory was otherwise communicated to the jury at any point in the trial — either by the court or by the government. The remarks on which the defendants rely were voiced outside the presence of the jury, and despite our invitation at oral argument, the defendants were not able to cite any instance in which comparable remarks were made in the jury's presence. Certainly the government invited the jury to infer, from the various documents found in the possession of one or more of the defendants, that each defendant had actual knowledge that the Aegis trust system was not legal. It was entirely plausible for the government to urge that inference be drawn and for the jury to draw it, for the evidence showed that Aegis officers were actively tracking court decisions and legal opinions as to the validity of the Aegis trusts and had received unequivocal notice, from multiple sources and on multiple occasions, that the Aegis system was illegal. Evidence reflecting that notice was found in Aegis's offices, for example. In Hills, we found comparable documentation discovered in the defendant's office sufficient to support a finding of a defendant's actual notice of the illegality of the Aegis trust system and her criminal willfulness, notwithstanding the absence of any direct evidence that she had seen these documents. 618 F.3d at 638. The plausibility of such an inference may have been all that the district court in this case meant to convey during the colloquy we have recounted above, as the court's subsequent remarks suggest. See R. 916 Tr. 2666 ("[I]f your client [Hopper] or others say that they were not on notice [as to the ARDC proceedings], they can certainly make that claim."); id. Tr. 2668 ("Whether your client [Dunn] was put on notice as a result of these [ARDC] proceedings is an issue for the jury to determine."); R. 910 Tr. 6298 ("[I]f the government establishes that this ... was a seized document [from Aegis headquarters], it will be up to the jury to determine which one [of the defendants] or how many saw it. But in terms of the law itself, it is at least admissible as notice to the conspirators.").
Finally, the defendants object to the district court's decision to admit evidence from the Illinois Attorney Registration and Disciplinary Commission proceeding that ultimately resulted in Bartoli's disbarment in Illinois. The defendants hold up the ARDC evidence as a "glaring" example of the court's willingness to permit the government to cite third-party documents as evidence that the defendants had notice of the illegality of the Aegis system, without proof that any defendant saw or knew about such documents. Defendants' Joint Br. 53. In the defendant's view, the admission of such evidence contravened Cheek's mandate that the government prove that each defendant had actual knowledge that his conduct was illegal.
The ARDC filed a complaint against Bartoli in 1996 based on his alleged misconduct in connection with both Heritage and Aegis. As amended, the complaint was based in part on trust packages that Bartoli had sold to (and prepared for) two couples: William and Mary DiSomma, who purchased a Heritage multi-trust system in March 1994 for $12,000, and Max and Linda Alumbaugh, who purchased an Aegis or Aegis-like CBO in August 1996 for $25,000.
On February 17, 2000, the Hearing Board filed a Report and Recommendation proposing that Bartoli be disbarred. After summarizing the evidence, the Hearing Board set forth a series of findings. The Hearing Board found, inter alia, that Bartoli had labored under a conflict of interest in representing both Heritage (which was interested in selling as many trust packages as possible, and which paid Bartoli for each trust he prepared) and Heritage members (i.e., clients like the DiSommas), who were relying on Bartoli's judgment and advice as a lawyer that a trust was appropriate for their needs. Report & Recommendation at 54-55, available at www.iardc.org. Bartoli labored under a similar conflict of interest when he sold the CBO to the Alumbaughs on behalf of Athens. Id. at 72-73. It found further that Bartoli's conduct was prejudicial to the administration of justice in that he had "created a situation where his professional judgment could have been clouded by the business interests of others and his own interests." Id. at 56, 69-70. It also found that Bartoli had misrepresented the benefits of the trust system to the DiSommas and the benefits of the CBO to the Alumbaughs. Id. at 61-69, 74, 78.
On December 27, 2001, a Review Board rejected Bartoli's challenge to the Hearing Board's Report and Recommendation and affirmed the Hearing Board's findings and sustained the recommendation that Bartoli be disbarred. The Illinois Supreme Court ordered Bartoli disbarred on May 24, 2002.
Mary Robinson, who was the Administrator of the ARDC throughout the time period during which the proceeding against Bartoli was pending and who participated in the evidentiary hearing before the Hearing Board, testified as a witness for the government in this case. Robinson identified a variety of documents connected with the ARDC proceeding which the court admitted into evidence over the defendants' objections, including the ARDC's complaint against Bartoli, the Hearing Board's Report and Recommendation, and the Review Board's own Report and Recommendation. She also read various excerpts from these documents, including portions of the Review Board's summary of Marutzky's testimony.
The district court admitted the ARDC documents, and permitted Robinson to read excerpts from them during her testimony, for the purpose of showing that the ARDC proceeding against Bartoli placed him and other defendants on notice that the Aegis trust system was not a legitimate means of tax avoidance; and we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in so ruling. The ARDC proceeding was relevant because it represented a direct challenge to the legitimacy of the Aegis CBO and its predecessor, the Heritage trust. See supra at 458 n.6. The Hearing Board's reasoning in finding Bartoli guilty of misconduct, including the aspects of Marutzky's testimony that it relied upon, was particularly probative in that it illustrated the ways in which the CBO system as promoted by Bartoli was irreconcilable with basic trust and tax principles. Bartoli himself was the respondent in the ARDC proceeding, was given notice of the proceeding and its outcome, and was represented by counsel throughout the proceeding. It is an entirely plausible and permissible inference that he was aware of the proceeding and what occurred in that proceeding despite the fact that he did not appear in person before the Hearing Board. Indeed, although Bartoli had assumed inactive status with the Illinois bar by the time the ARDC filed the complaint in 1996, Bartoli had an incentive to both monitor the proceeding and to deny the ARDC's allegations, as the complaint called into question the legitimacy of the trust system promoted by Aegis, with which Bartoli remained involved long after the ARDC filed its complaint in 1996. See supra at 458 n.6. His co-defendants had similar reasons to be interested in the outcome of the proceeding, and there were multiple indicia that they were, in fact, aware of and following the proceeding. Hopper and Vallone, as we have noted, were both deposed in the course of the proceeding, and Robinson recalled that she also took a statement from Dunn. Bartoli, Vallone, Hopper, and Dunn were also plaintiffs in the May 1997 suit filed against the ARDC, Robinson, and others alleging that the ARDC was violating Bartoli's First Amendment and due process rights and was conspiring to deprive all four plaintiffs of their Fourteenth Amendment liberty interest in their business reputation. To say the least, that suit displays an interest in the outcome of the ARDC proceeding. Moreover, a copy of Marutzky's testimony was found in the Aegis office along with Hopper's critique of the testimony. Several volumes of additional ARDC documents were also found in Aegis's office. Similar documents were found in Dunn's office as well.
The district court advised the jury that the ARDC evidence was admitted solely for notice purposes, R. 916 Tr. 2673, and the jury was obviously free to give the evidence what weight it deemed appropriate as to the state of mind of each defendant. Indeed, the court noted that the defendants were free to question Robinson in an effort to show that they were not necessarily aware of the ARDC proceeding, and they exercised that prerogative: Bartoli's counsel established on cross-examination of Robinson that he was not present before the Hearing Board, R. 916 Tr. 2727; and Dunn's counsel established that only Bartoli, as the sole named respondent, would have been given formal
Count One of the superseding indictment charged that the defendants violated 18 U.S.C. § 371 by conspiring to
R. 103 ¶ 2. The defendants moved to dismiss this count as duplicitous, reasoning that it alleged two distinct conspiracies and therefore two different crimes; but the district court denied the motion. The defendants contend that this was error, renewing their contention that Count One on its faces alleges two different crimes. We review the district court's ruling on this point de novo. E.g., United States v. Pansier, 576 F.3d 726, 734 (7th Cir.2009).
We agree with the district court that Count One is not duplicitous. A duplicitous charge is not one that simply alleges a single offense committed by multiple means, e.g., United States v. Cephus, 684 F.3d 703, 706 (7th Cir.2012); United States v. Davis, 471 F.3d 783, 790 (7th Cir.2006), but rather one that joins two or more distinct crimes in a single count, e.g., United States v. Starks, 472 F.3d 466, 470-71 (7th Cir. 2006); see also Worthington v. United States, 64 F.2d 936, 938-39 (7th Cir. 1933). Count One does not allege two different crimes. Instead, it alleges a conspiracy with two goals — (1) to defraud the United States by impeding the IRS's efforts to collect income taxes, and (2) to commit tax offenses, namely the preparation of fraudulent tax returns. Such a charge is permissible. As the Supreme Court explained in Braverman v. United States, 317 U.S. 49, 54, 63 S.Ct. 99, 102, 87 L.Ed. 23 (1942), "A conspiracy is not the commission of the crime which it contemplates, and neither violates nor `arises under' the statute whose violation is its object.... The single agreement is the prohibited conspiracy, and however diverse its objects it violates but a single statute." Following that reasoning, this court concluded in United States v. Hughes, 310 F.3d 557, 560-61 (7th Cir. 2002), that a charge alleging a conspiracy with two illicit objectives was not duplicitous. See also United States v. Bradfield, 376 Fed.Appx. 620, 623-24 (7th Cir. 2010) (non-precedential decision) (same).
We see no reason to depart from our holding in Hughes here. As the defendants point out, both objects of the conspiracy charged in Hughes fell under the offense prong of section 371 (i.e., conspiring to commit an offense against the United States), whereas in this case the charged conspiracy implicates both prongs of the statute (i.e., conspiring to defraud the United States as well as to commit an offense against it). But that distinction does not address Braverman's essential
Finally, the principal vice of duplicity, as we noted in Hughes, is that it presents the possibility that jury members, although agreeing that there was a conspiracy, might not be unanimous as to what the object of the conspiracy was. 310 F.3d at 561; see also Cephus, 684 F.3d at 706; Starks, 472 F.3d at 471. But the district court instructed the jury in this case that it must unanimously agree on at least one of the alleged objectives of the conspiracy. R. 925 at 7375. That takes care of the jury unanimity concern, as Hughes and Starks acknowledge. Hughes, 310 F.3d at 561; Starks, 472 F.3d at 471. There are other concerns potentially implicated by duplicity, including notice to the defendants. Cephus, 684 F.3d at 706. But no such concerns are raised here.
The defendants object to certain jury instructions given at the request of the government and to the court's refusal to give certain instructions that the defendants themselves proposed. They also argue more generally that the instructions as given favored the government, unduly prejudiced the defense, and exemplify the court's purported bias against the defendants, which we take up in the next section of this opinion. To the extent a particular jury instruction presents a legal question — for example, whether it accurately states the law — our review is de novo. E.g., United States v. Tanner, 628 F.3d 890, 904 (7th Cir.2010) (citing United States v. DiSantis, 565 F.3d 354, 359 (7th Cir.2009)), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 132 S.Ct. 204, 181 L.Ed.2d 109 (2011). Beyond that, we review the district court's decision whether or not to give a particular instruction for abuse of discretion. Id. (citing United States v. Wilson, 134 F.3d 855, 868 (7th Cir.1998)). We will reverse a conviction only if the instructions, as a whole, so misled the jury on the relevant principles as to have prejudiced the defendant. E.g., United States v. Quintero, 618 F.3d 746, 753 (7th Cir.2010). For the reasons set forth below, we conclude that the jury instructions as a whole accurately summarized the law and did not interfere with the defendants' ability to pursue their Cheek defense, and that the district court did not abuse its discretion either in giving a challenged instruction proposed by the government or in refusing an instruction proposed by the defense.
Instruction 27A gave the jury an overview of how income is assigned for tax purposes as between legal entities such as trusts and corporations and the individuals behind these entities and, in particular, the circumstances under which a trust will be disregarded for federal tax purposes. Among other points, the instruction advised the jury that:
R. 925 Tr. 7379-80.
The defendants argue that this instruction was both unnecessary, in that the court had barred the defense from arguing that the Aegis trust system was legal, and prejudicial, in that (as the defendants read the instruction) it effectively precluded them from showing that they had a good faith belief in the legality of the Aegis trust system. "Having prevented the Defendants from presenting their belief in the legality of the system, the court's instruction now invited the jury to convict if it found [the system] unlawful." Defendants' Joint Br. 62. Cf. United States v. McKnight, 671 F.3d 664, 665 (7th Cir.) (Posner, J., dissenting from denial of rehearing en banc) ("[Gratuitous] instructions are apt to confuse jurors, and when as in this case they are proposed by a party rather than given on the initiative of the trial judge, they may be intended to confuse, and in the present case to undermine the efficacy of an instruction desired by the opposing party and given by the judge."), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 132 S.Ct. 2756, 183 L.Ed.2d 626 (2012); United States v. Hill, 252 F.3d 919, 923 (7th Cir. 2001) ("Unless it is necessary to give an instruction, it is necessary not to give it, so that the important instructions stand out and are remembered.").
We find no abuse of discretion in the district court's decision to give this instruction. The defendants implicitly concede that it was an accurate statement of the law. In order to assess the validity of the defendants' Cheek defense, and to determine whether the defendants had indeed willfully engaged in a scheme to defraud the government of its tax revenues, the jury had to understand the basic legal principles that the IRS had relied on in deeming the Aegis trusts a sham. Only then could the jury evaluate the plausibility of the defendants' contention that they had a good faith belief in the legitimacy of the trusts notwithstanding these principles, as well as the plausibility of the government's contrary contention that the defendants must, in fact, have realized that the Aegis system was illegitimate. The principles of tax and trust law are unfamiliar to most jurors; and the district court could reasonably have concluded that it was both reasonable and necessary to apprise the jury of the basic principles included in instruction 27A.
We reject the notion that this instruction somehow impeded, let alone precluded, a Cheek defense. The instruction said nothing which would prevent the defendants from claiming that they did not realize the Aegis trusts were an illegal means of tax avoidance; in fact, the instruction said nothing at all about the legality of the Aegis trust system. The defendants were free to, and did, argue that the Aegis trusts were structured so as to comply with the law and to make it plausible for them to believe in good faith that the trusts were a legitimate means of tax avoidance. There was, at the same time, a wealth of evidence supporting the jury's
Although it did not cite the Aegis trust by name, IRS Notice 97-24, issued in April 1997, expressed the opinion of the IRS that trusts akin to the Aegis trusts were an unlawful means of tax avoidance. As we noted in our summary of the facts, there was evidence that the defendants were very much aware of this IRS notice, and the government, of course, cited the notice as one piece of evidence that the defendants knew the Aegis system was illegal. The defendants proposed an instruction that would have advised the jury on the relative legal weight of IRS regulations, revenue rulings, letter rulings, and public notices, the last of which "have no force of law." R. 528 at 2; R. 940 Tr. 6770-72. The district court declined to give the instruction. Without such an instruction, the defendants argue, the jury was left with the impression that IRS Notice 97-24 was an authoritative statement of the law, and that mistaken impression undermined the defendants' contention that they genuinely believed that the Aegis trusts were a permissible means of tax avoidance.
Because reasonable minds might differ as to the propriety of this instruction, we find no abuse of discretion in the district court's refusal to give it. The government does not quarrel with the legal accuracy of the proposed instruction, and one might argue that given the government's reliance on Notice 97-24 as proof that the defendants knew that the Aegis system was unlawful, it would be appropriate to inform the jury that the Notice was not an authoritative statement of the law. On the other hand, we are pointed to no evidence that the government ever suggested that it was authoritative; and an IRS agent accurately testified before the jury that the Notice "expresses the IRS's opinion of the law." R. 971 Tr. 4580-81. Even if we were persuaded that it was an abuse of discretion for the court not to give this instruction, any error in refusing to give it was harmless, given the overwhelming evidence showing that the defendants appreciated the illegality of their conduct.
The district court properly instructed the jury, consistent with Seventh Circuit Pattern Criminal Jury Instruction 5.09, that if it found a defendant guilty of the conspiracy charged in Count One of the indictment, it could hold that defendant accountable for any criminal act foreseeably committed by a co-conspirator in furtherance of the conspiracy, including in particular the substantive criminal acts alleged in Counts 2 through 34 of the superseding indictment. R. 925 Tr. 7381; see generally Pinkerton v. United States, 328 U.S. 640, 647-48, 66 S.Ct. 1180, 1184, 90 L.Ed. 1489 (1946). The defendants suggest that this instruction "removed the intent to defraud and Cheek issues from the jury's consideration once it determined that the Count [One] conspiracy had been proven and that each defendant had been a member of the conspiracy," and "effectively eviscerated the government's burden of proving that defendants lacked a good faith belief that the Aegis system was lawful and that they had the intent to defraud...." Defendants' Joint Br. 65. This particular contention was not made below, see R. 936 Tr. 6008-09, so our review is solely for plain error, Fed.R.Crim.P. 30(d), 52(b); e.g., United States v. Johnson, 655 F.3d 594,
The instruction was an accurate statement of the law, and by no means did it "eviscerate" the government's burden with respect to the Cheek defense. As the government points out, the instructions with respect to Count One required a finding of intent to defraud as to the first prong of section 371 and willfulness as to the second prong. R. 925 at 7375-77. Thus, neither the intent to defraud nor the Cheek defense was removed from the jury's consideration: before convicting a defendant on the conspiracy count, the jury would necessarily have to find that a defendant harbored an intent to defraud and/or lacked a good faith belief in the Aegis trust system's legality, and either finding is irreconcilable with the defendants' contention that they understood the Aegis system of trusts to be a legitimate means of tax minimization.
At the government's request, and over the strong objections of the defendants, the court gave the jury an instruction on the conscious avoidance of knowledge (also referred to colloquially as the "ostrich" instruction), which advised the jury that it could infer a defendant's culpable knowledge from a combination of suspicion and indifference to the truth. See Seventh Circuit Pattern Criminal Jury Instruction No. 4.06 ¶ 2. The conscious avoidance instruction serves to alert the jury that "a person may not escape criminal liability by pleading ignorance if he knows or strongly suspects that he is involved in criminal dealings but deliberately avoids learning more exact information about the nature or extent of those dealings." United States v. Green, 648 F.3d 569, 582 (7th Cir.2011). However, because this instruction poses a risk that a jury might improperly convict a defendant on the basis that he should have known that he was participating in wrongdoing, rather than on the basis of his actual knowledge, United States v. Tanner, supra, 628 F.3d at 904-05, the instruction "is to be given `cautiously' and only for `narrow' uses," United States v. Malewicka, 664 F.3d 1099, 1108 (7th Cir.2011) (quoting United States v. Ciesiolka, 614 F.3d 347, 352-53 (7th Cir. 2010)). Specifically, the instruction should only be given in cases "where (1) a defendant claims to lack guilty knowledge, i.e., knowledge of her conduct's illegality, and (2) the government presents evidence from which a jury could conclude that the defendant deliberately avoided the truth." Green, 648 F.3d at 582 (quoting United States v. Garcia, 580 F.3d 528, 537 (7th Cir.2009)).
As an example of the willful blindness that it believed warranted the instruction in this case, the government cited to the district court attorney Parker's testimony as to why he had remained involved with Aegis despite his own doubts about the Aegis system. R. 1020 Tr. 5966-67. Parker had acknowledged on redirect examination by the government that during the period of his involvement with Aegis from 1997 through 2000, he had harbored suspicions that the Aegis system was not legitimate and yet had pushed his doubts aside for fear of what he might learn if he looked more closely at the state of the law R. 914 at 2272. He reiterated this point on re-cross examination by the defense. When asked whether the promotional materials distributed at Aegis seminars (at which Parker had spoken for two years) did not contain a wealth of citations to legal authorities indicating that the trusts were, in fact, legal, Parker answered, "I put my head in the sand. I put my fingers in my ears." Id. at 2282. The government said that Parker's testimony was just
The defendants contend that the evidence did not warrant such an instruction, because (a) however willfully blind Parker may have been to the legal flaws in the Aegis system, he was not on trial and it was thus improper to attribute his own conscious avoidance to the six defendants who were on trial; and (b) Vallone's testimony, rather than supporting an inference of deliberate indifference, actually reveals the "zealous care" that he took to keep himself apprised of the state of the law and to confirm that the Aegis trust system complied with the law. Defendants' Joint Br. 67-68.
The district court did not err in giving this instruction. As we have noted, a conscious avoidance instruction is appropriate when the defendant claims not to have known that what he was doing was illegal and there is, at the same time, evidence supporting an inference that the defendant closed his eyes to the illegality of his conduct. Green, supra, 648 F.3d at 582. It was a fair inference, to say the least, that the defendants in this case had deliberately blinded themselves to the variety of warnings they had received as to the illlegality of the Aegis system. Parker's, testimony was relevant on this point, despite his status as a witness for the government, in that he was intimately involved in the promotion of the Aegis system and yet conceded, in retrospect, that he had essentially turned his head away from the multiple clues (and his own suspicion) that the system was illegal. And notwithstanding Vallone's self-serving testimony that he was diligent in following and responding to the legal developments relevant to the Aegis trusts, the jury nonetheless could infer that he, like Parker, had really been burying his head in the sand.
Take the following incident described by Parker. Parker testified that in the summer of 1999, following the Tax Court's decision in Muhich, there was a meeting at Aegis headquarters, in Vallone's office. In addition to Vallone and Parker, Dunn and Hopper were present, and Bartoli participated by telephone. In the course of that meeting, Bartoli reported that he was attempting to get an opinion from an Atlanta law firm as to the legality of the Aegis system. According to Parker, Vallone was critical of that idea, both because it was likely to be costly and because "there's no guarantee as to what the result of that opinion would be, whether it would be a favorable opinion or a nonfavorable opinion or a neutral opinion." R. 913 Tr. 1954. Parker chimed in that the IRS had a more economical process through which one could seek an opinion ruling. Id. Vallone, according to Parker, rejected that idea as "ridiculous" id., "because we know what the answer will be and, therefore, why bother?" id. Thereafter, Parker was asked to leave the room. Dunn later told him that the group had discussed the Audit Arsenal as a means to fend off looming IRS audits of Aegis clients. Id. Tr. 1955-56.
One can readily infer from Parker's description of this meeting that the Aegis principals were deliberately avoiding any independent advice as to the legality of the Aegis trusts, realizing that the advice was likely to be that the trusts were an ineffective means of tax avoidance. The defendants were given many warning signs to that effect over the life of the charged conspiracy, from the ARDC complaint
We note that the Third Circuit's decision in United States v. Stadtmauer, 620 F.3d 238 (3d Cir.2010), sustained the giving of a conscious avoidance instruction based on the defendant's willful blindness to the legality of various deductions fraudulently claimed on the tax returns that had been filed on behalf of the limited partnerships that the defendant helped manage. (The defendant was charged, inter alia, with aiding and abetting these false or fraudulent tax returns, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2).) The court rejected the argument that such an instruction, to the extent it applies to the defendant's knowledge of the law, is irreconcilable with the good-faith defense endorsed by Cheek. The justification for the Cheek defense, the court explained, is that given the complexity of the tax system, one may in good faith err despite genuine efforts to ascertain and comply with the law. However, "[b]y definition, one who intentionally avoids learning of his tax obligations is not a taxpayer who `earnestly wish[es] to follow the law,' or fails to do so as a result of an `innocent error[] made despite the exercise of reasonable care.'" 620 F.3d at 256 (quoting Cheek, 498 U.S. at 205, 111 S.Ct. at 612) (emphasis in Stadtmauer). "Rather, a person who deliberately evades learning his legal duties has a subjectively culpable state of mind that goes beyond mere negligence, a good faith misunderstanding, or even recklessness." Id. As support for giving a willful blindness instruction, the court cited, among other authorities, our own decision in United States v. Hauert, 40 F.3d 197, 203 & n. 7 (7th Cir.1994), which affirmed the propriety of such an instruction in a tax-protester case. 620 F.3d at 256 n. 21. The circumstances supporting the instruction here were at least as compelling, if not more so, than in those cases.
The defendants object to a standard instruction admonishing the jury to consider the testimony of David Jenkins, a witness who was granted immunity from prosecution by the government, "with caution and great care." R. 925 Tr. 7369; Seventh Cir. Pattern Criminal Jury Instruction No. 3.13. Jenkins, of course, testified on behalf of the government. But because the defendants found certain aspects of Jenkins testimony to be helpful to their cause, and because the district judge himself voiced skepticism as to certain aspects of Jenkins' testimony (more on this below), the defendants believe that this instruction all but invited the jury to discredit Jenkins' testimony, including the portions that were favorable to the defense. We see no error in giving the instruction, however. Jenkins was the government's witness, and as such the admonishment to consider his testimony with caution and great care applied to those portions of his testimony that helped the government as well as those that were helpful to the defense. Nothing in the instruction suggested to the jury that it should weigh his testimony in any particular way, but rather that it evaluate his testimony carefully. The instruction was unexceptional and could not have unduly prejudiced the defense.
The defendants make a wholly undeveloped, two sentence argument which appears to suggest that the district court's
A defendant has a fundamental right to a fair trial in a fair tribunal, Bracy v. Gramley, 520 U.S. 899, 904-05, 117 S.Ct. 1793, 1797, 138 L.Ed.2d 97 (1997) (quoting Withrow v. Larkin, 421 U.S. 35, 46, 95 S.Ct. 1456, 1464, 43 L.Ed.2d 712 (1975)), and that fairness requires absence of actual bias or prejudice on the part of the judge, In re Murchison, 349 U.S. 133, 136, 75 S.Ct. 623, 625, 99 L.Ed. 942 (1955). However, impartiality does not imply passivity: "[j]udges ... are not wallflowers or potted plants." Tagatz v. Marquette Univ., 861 F.2d 1040, 1045 (7th Cir.1988). A judge may question and even challenge an attorney, witness, or evidence without being said to have abandoned his constitutionally mandated impartiality. See, e.g., United States v. McCray, 437 F.3d 639, 643 (7th Cir.2006) ("A district judge is free to interject during direct or cross-examination to clarify an issue, to require an attorney to lay a foundation, or to encourage an examining attorney to get to the point.") (quoting United States v. Washington, 417 F.3d 780, 784 (7th Cir.2005)); Dugan v. R.J. Corman R.R. Co., 344 F.3d 662, 669-70 (7th Cir.2003) (exclusion of evidence that was not objected to but which judge found unreliable); United States v. Mohammad, 53 F.3d 1426, 1434 (7th Cir.1995) (criticizing trial counsel), overruled on other grounds by United States v. Sawyer, 521 F.3d 792 (7th Cir.2008); United States v. Jackson, 983 F.2d 757, 762 (7th Cir. 1993) (same). But, a "judge who is so hostile to a lawyer as to doom the client to defeat deprives the client of the right to an impartial tribunal." Walberg v. Israel, 766 F.2d 1071, 1077 (7th Cir.1985). "Even when the biased judge neither is the trier of fact nor is shown to have conveyed his bias to the jury that is the trier of fact, there can be a violation of due process which requires a reversal of the conviction." Id. at 1076.
The defendants suggest that the trial judge, in a variety of situations and in a variety of ways, exhibited a bias against the defense that deprived them of a fair trial. For the most part, their claim is not that the court by its conduct communicated a disbelief of or skepticism toward the defense to the jury, e.g., United States v. Barnhart, 599 F.3d 737, 742 (7th Cir. 2010), but rather that the judge was actually biased against the defense, see 28 U.S.C. § 455(b)(1). Actual bias requires evidence that the judge was burdened by a conflict of interest or had some personal stake in the proceeding sufficient to cause a reasonable person to believe that the judge was incapable of ruling fairly, and thus to demand that we set aside the usual presumption that the judge has properly discharged his duties. See Liteky v. United States, 510 U.S. 540, 555, 114 S.Ct. 1147, 1157, 127 L.Ed.2d 474 (1994); United States v. Diekemper, 604 F.3d 345, 352 (7th Cir.2010) Collins v. Illinois, 554 F.3d 693, 697 (7th Cir.2009); Harrison v. McBride, 428 F.3d 652, 668 (7th Cir.2005). Actual bias, when shown, is the sort of structural defect that defies harmless-error inquiry and compels reversal regardless of how strong the government's case against the defendant was or whether the
We proceed to consider each of the actions that the defendants cite as illustrative of the district judge's bias against them. For the reasons we articulate below, we discern no proof of actual bias on the part of the judge. Furthermore, the defendants have not shown that anything the court did in the course of the trial conveyed any prejudice against the defense to the jury or otherwise deprived the defendants of a fair trial.
Appointment of substitute counsel when Vallone's counsel fell ill. On a morning relatively early in the trial, Vallone's counsel, Richard McLeese, informed the court by telephone that he was ill with flu-like symptoms and could not participate in the trial that day. Vallone informed the court that Parker, the witness testifying on behalf of the government at that time, was an important witness and that he wanted his attorney present for his testimony rather than relying on another defendant's counsel or a temporary replacement from the federal defender program, two possibilities that the court had suggested. The court recessed the trial for a day, but when court reconvened the next day, McLeese, who was still under the weather, was again absent. The court reported that he had left the "lamest message one can imagine receiving in terms of illness." R. 1014 Tr. 1865. Vallone again indicated to the court that he did not wish to proceed in the absence of his attorney. Unwilling to delay the trial any longer, the court, over the vigorous objections of all parties, appointed an attorney from the federal defender's office — who himself objected, noting that he had no familiarity with the case — to stand in for McLeese as Vallone's counsel. The court indicated that it would reserve Vallone's cross-examination of Parker until McLeese returned. The jury was then summoned into the courtroom, and the trial resumed with the continuation of the government's direct examination of Parker. After Parker had given testimony spanning approximately forty pages of the trial transcript, the jury was excused when two senior members of the U.S. Attorney's office appeared in the courtroom. The deputy chief of the criminal division expressed the government's "serious concern" about the court's decision to proceed in the absence of competent, prepared counsel or a clear waiver from Vallone. Id. Tr. 1908. The court, although still concerned with the pace and length of the trial and the uncertainty as to when McLeese would be well enough to resume work, nonetheless agreed to recess the trial. When the trial resumed the following week with all counsel present, the court offered to have the government re-question Parker on the matters to which he had testified in McLeese's absence. But McLeese declined the offer. "I have reviewed the transcript of the proceedings that I missed, and I don't see any need to repeat that testimony." R. 913 Tr. 1921. The court then specifically inquired and confirmed that both Vallone
We discern no evidence of bias in the course of action that the court pursued and no prejudice to the defense. The court was understandably and legitimately concerned about the prospect of an open-ended delay in a lengthy trial with a jury already empaneled. Nonetheless, Parker was a key government witness whose testimony substantially incriminated Vallone. Vallone was entitled to representation by an attorney who was knowledgeable about the case and prepared to observe and respond appropriately to Parker's testimony. All parties agree, as they did below, that the court erred in deciding to proceed in the absence of appropriate representation for Vallone. For present purposes, we may take it as a given that the court's decision to go forward was mistaken. Still, we see no way in which the decision reflected a bias against Vallone in particular or the defendants generally as opposed to a legitimate concern about delaying the trial and inconveniencing the jury. Moreover, the extent of the testimony that Parker gave in McLeese's absence was relatively minimal. McLeese had the opportunity to review the transcript of Parker's testimony before the trial resumed, and both he and Vallone waived the opportunity to have Parker repeat that portion of his testimony. Vallone makes no argument that he was, in the end, concretely prejudiced by what occurred in his counsel's absence; and, indeed, other than as an example of the court's purported bias, Vallone has not raised this as a stand-alone error that demands a new trial. Within the overall context of a lengthy trial, this was a discrete and ultimately harmless error.
Harsh interrogation when Vallone moved to dismiss indictment on speedy trial grounds. The defendants next cite as evidence of the district court's bias its reaction to the motion to dismiss the indictment that Vallone filed shortly before the trial, invoking the Speedy Trial Act. They contend that it is evident from the transcript of the hearing on that motion that the court felt it had been "sandbagged" by Vallone's counsel and took personal offense at the suggestion that it had deprived Vallone (or any other defendant) of the right to a speedy trial by granting the defendants' own requests for continuances. Defendants' Joint Br. 72. The defendants contend that the court castigated McLeese, questioned whether the motion had been filed in good faith, and interrupted McLeese repeatedly, evincing an animosity to the defense that went well beyond the impatience that one might otherwise expect in reaction to an eleventh-hour motion of this sort.
Having reviewed the transcript of the hearing, we disagree with the contention that the court's reaction to the motion bespeaks an anti-defense bias. The transcript arguably does suggest that the court was annoyed with the contention that Vallone had been deprived of his right to a speedy trial, and the court did press Vallone's counsel to acknowledge that he had joined in the other defendants' requests for continuances. But we believe that any annoyance on the part of the court was understandable. Vallone's motion was brought on the eve of trial after years of pre-trial litigation and multiple requests for delay sought by the defendants themselves, agreed to by Vallone's counsel, and granted in some instances over the objection of the government. We ourselves have observed that a record of delays sought by the defendant will cast doubt on the validity of his subsequent contention that he has been deprived of his right to a
Skeptical reaction to Jenkins. The defendants assert that "the court's animosity towards defendants was fully on display" during the testimony of David Jenkins. Defendants' Joint Br. 73. Recall that Jenkins was the individual who helped set up offshore entities in Belize for Aegis clients. As we have said, Jenkins testified under a grant of immunity. And although he was the government's witness, some of what he said, principally during cross-examination by defense counsel, was favorable to the defense. For example, Jenkins testified that the backdating of documents was not prohibited under Belizean law (R. 929 Tr. 1381; R. 967 Tr. 1517), that the monetary transfers associated with demands on promissory notes were not illegal (R. 929 Tr. 1385), and that Jenkins understood Vallone to be attempting to establish a system that complied with U.S. as well as Belizean law (R. 929 Tr. 1402). There were times during his testimony when the court interrupted Jenkins to ask him if he understood the question that had been posed and to repeat his answer. E.g., R. 929 Tr. 1381; R. 967 Tr. 1501, 1519-20. The defendants suggest that these interruptions communicated the judge's skepticism and disbelief of Jenkins' testimony to the jury. Again, we conclude that the record does not bear the defendants' assertion out.
Although the record does confirm that the judge periodically interrupted Jenkins' testimony, the interruptions on the whole do not support the inference that the judge was biased against the defense or conveyed a disbelief of Jenkins' testimony to the jury. "District judges have broad discretion in conducting trials and may question witnesses during direct or cross-examination." Barnhart, supra, 599 F.3d at 743. We note first that the judge's interruptions began well before Jenkins gave testimony that the defendants perceive as helpful to them. See, e.g., R. 929 Tr. 1310-11, 1367-69, 1390; R. 967 Tr. 1439, 1486. Indeed, our review of the record suggests that the judge was an active questioner of witnesses, often interjecting to ensure that the witness understood an ambiguous question, to clarify an answer, or to have the witness expand on a point that the court was curious about. This was just as true in the case of Jenkins' testimony as it was with other witnesses. And we note that a number of the interruptions of Jenkins appear to have been occasioned by the court's legitimate concern that Jenkins may have misunderstood a broad or poorly worded question. E.g., R. 292 Tr. 1385; R. 967 Tr. 1501, 1514, 1519-20. At the same time, there were numerous instances in which Jenkins gave a seemingly defense friendly answer with no interruption or remark by the court. E.g., R. 929 Tr. 1382, 1388, 1401, 1402, 1403; R. 967 Tr. 1469-71, 1473, 1499, 1577.
The defendants also complain that at the conclusion of Jenkins' testimony, the judge, with the jury still present, asked Jenkins, "Could you step over here, please?" R. 967 Tr. 1521. Presumably, the court intended to confer with Jenkins in a sidebar conference. Then, remarking that "there's another way to do this," the court instead excused the jury from the courtroom. With the jury gone, the judge then suggested to Jenkins that he might wish to speak with his American counsel before returning to Belize. Although the judge did not make explicit why he thought Jenkins should promptly confer with his attorney, we gather that the judge had some concern that portions of Jenkins' testimony may have placed him in jeopardy. After Jenkins was excused, the defendants objected to the fact that the court, while the jury was still present, had summoned Jenkins to the side. Defense counsel asserted that both the wording and the "pointed" tone of the court's request had conveyed its disbelief of Jenkins' testimony to the jury and an intent to admonish Jenkins. The court rejected the notion that the words it had used signaled something negative to the jury and, after having the court reporter's audio recording played back, likewise rejected that there was any such implication in its tone.
Nothing in the court's request that Jenkins "step over here, please" bespeaks bias on the part of the court or demonstrates prejudice to the defendants. It is pure speculation to suggest, even against the backdrop of the judge's interruptions of Jenkins, that the jury must have inferred the judge's disbelief of and unhappiness with Jenkins' testimony. The defendants read entirely too much into this brief request of Jenkins.
Reaction to Cross-Examination of Parker and Special Agent Smyros, and Direct Examination of Vallone. The defendants next argue that the judge's unwillingness to allow Vallone's counsel to pursue certain relevant lines of inquiry during the cross-examination of two government witnesses (Parker and Special Agent Andrew Smyros), and its apparent impatience with the length of time counsel spent on the direct examination of Vallone, displayed bias. As to Parker and Smyros, the court may have misunderstood the point that Vallone's counsel was attempting to explore; and as to Vallone, the court appears to have been concerned about one line of inquiry that his counsel was pursuing rather than the overall length of Vallone's direct examination. But in none of these three instances do we discern evidence of bias against Vallone, his counsel, or the defense generally.
The issue vis-à-vis Parker arose with respect to his testimony concerning the Audit Arsenal letters he sent to the IRS on behalf of Aegis clients who had received notice that they would be audited by the IRS. Parker prepared these letters based
We are inclined to agree with the government that this was an instance of the court misapprehending the point that McLeese was trying to make with the witness. Eliciting Parker's acknowledgment that taxpayers do have a Fifth Amendment right against self-incrimination would not have called into question the constitutionality of the Internal Revenue Code or the legitimacy of the IRS audit notices. At the same time, it would have been a legitimate way for the defense to point out that the letters sent out by Parker were not wholly frivolous in their content, and in turn to argue to the jury that the letters were not, contrary to the government's view, simply a means of evading and obstructing the IRS audits. Perhaps the court was misled on this point, when, at an initial sidebar, McLeese remarked, "What this has to do with is the constitutionality of the tax laws, not of filing a tax return, but rather of asserting your constitutional rights in response to an audit request." R. 947 Tr. 2045. We understand McLeese to have been trying to distinguish the pretrial ruling which declared the constitutionality of the tax laws off limits, but the ambiguous wording of this remark may have simply confirmed, in the court's mind, that the constitutionality of the tax laws was precisely what McLeese intended to explore with the witness. In any case, Vallone makes no argument that he was prejudiced by the ruling. He argues only that the court's repeated interruptions and admonitions show bias at work. We view it instead as an instance of miscommunication and misunderstanding.
Much the same is true as to what occurred during Special Agent Smyros's testimony. Smyros was one of the agents who participated in the March 7, 2003 search of Vallone's home. On cross-examination, McLeese sought to establish in some detail the context, chronology, and thoroughness of the search. R. 931 Tr. 3010-22. The government objected to the inquiry on the ground of relevance. The court, by contrast, was concerned that McLeese was attempting to suggest that the search was improper in some way. Id. Tr. 3015. McLeese assured the court that he agreed the search was lawful and was not attempting to suggest otherwise. The court then sustained the government's relevance objection. McLeese continued to pose questions of Smyros aimed at eliciting the purpose and thoroughness of the
Again, we believe that the court likely misunderstood what McLeese hoped to show through this barred line of questioning. We gather that what McLeese hoped to establish is that despite what he expected Smyros to say was a thorough search of Vallone's home, the agents did not discover any email or other document in which Vallone in some way acknowledged (in McLeese's words), "I know what we're doing doesn't comply with the requirements of the federal tax laws, but I think we can get away with it anyway." R. 931 Tr. 3022. Arguably this was an appropriate line of inquiry given Vallone's Cheek defense and the government's burden to prove his willfulness, and certainly it would have in no way called into question the legality of the search. But we see no sign that the court in limiting this line of inquiry was motivated by bias rather than a genuine misunderstanding of what McLeese hoped to establish. And McLeese ultimately was able to elicit Smyros's acknowledgment that he did not recall seeing any smoking gun admission along the lines that McLeese posited, so there was no prejudice in the limits imposed on him by the court.
Finally, the following brief exchange occurred during Vallone's first day on the witness stand. When McLeese suggested that he had reached a point in his examination of Vallone that would be convenient for the lunch break, the court asked him how much longer he expected to be with his direct examination. When McLeese responded that he expected his examination to continue into the following day, the court called for a sidebar. McLeese, apparently anticipating that he was about to be scolded, immediately pointed out that the government's first witness had been on the stand for three days. The court admonished McLeese for making such a statement in front of the jury. At the sidebar, the court seemed to be primarily concerned with the amount of time McLeese was spending on a particular point rather than with the overall length of Vallone's testimony. See R. 920 Tr. 5137-38.
Although by now it should be clear that McLeese and the court did not have an easy relationship, we see no hint of any bias or unfairness in this exchange. Vallone went on to testify for a total of five days, so there can be no argument that the court imposed any undue limitation on his testimony. The court, as we have said, appears to have been primarily concerned with something other than the length of Vallone's testimony. We view the court's decision to summon McLeese to a sidebar, and the exchange that followed, as immaterial.
Court in Role of Prosecutor. The defendants contend that the record is "replete" with instances in which the court assumed a partisan role on behalf of the government. Defendants' Joint Br. 77. They cite three groups of examples in support of their contention: (1) the court's interruptions during Jenkins' testimony, which we described earlier; (2) the court's purported pattern of prompting the government to make objections to questions posed by the defense or making its own objections to such questions, and ultimately cutting off defense questioning; and (3) the court's purported "bolstering" of the credibility of Mary Robinson during her testimony regarding the ARDC proceeding involving Bartoli.
Having reviewed the examples that the defendants have cited, we find no meaningful
Evidentiary Rulings. The defendant's next contention is that the court "made numerous evidentiary rulings which allowed the government to present nearly any evidence it desired." Defendants' Joint Br. 78. In examining the examples cited by the defendants, however, we see no sign that the court admitted evidence improperly or in a one-sided manner.
(1) The first example is again one we have discussed: the admission of evidence related to Bartoli's ARDC proceeding, including the Hearing Board's summary of Marutzky's testimony that the Heritage/Aegis trusts were ineffective as a means of tax avoidance. The defendants' argument in this instance is principally one of asymmetry: they note that the court allowed the ARDC evidence as proof of notice to Bartoli (as well as his codefendants) that the Aegis system was illegitimate, yet improperly restricted the attempts of Bartoli's counsel to establish that Bartoli's participation in the ARDC proceeding, and thus his familiarity with what occurred, was minimal. The defendants posit that the probative worth of the ARDC evidence as proof of notice to Bartoli (let alone his co-defendants) was weak, in that (a) Bartoli was not finally disbarred until May 2002, late in the life of the conspiracy and years after Bartoli had left his role as counsel to Aegis, and (b) the inference that Bartoli and others were aware of what occurred in the ARDC proceeding hinged on the mere discovery of ARDC materials in Aegis's Illinois office in 2000, again well after Bartoli had retired to South Carolina. Nonetheless, in allowing the government to present the ARDC evidence, the court told Bartoli's counsel that "[i]f your position is that Mr. Bartoli never received notice [of the ARDC proceeding] formally, informally, de facto, or otherwise, whatever your claim may be, then you can pursue that on cross-examination." R. 916 Tr. 2663-64. But when counsel attempted to ask Robinson on cross-examination whether she knew whether Bartoli's attorney in the ARDC proceeding had ever communicated to Bartoli the opinion Marutzky had given in that proceeding, the court sustained the government's objection to the question. R. 916 Tr. 2727. And when counsel asked Robinson to confirm that Bartoli was not present in person for the hearing before the ARDC's Hearing Board, and Robinson did so, the court interrupted and remarked that the relevant notice was "notice of what had occurred and the ultimate decision." Id. Tr. 2728. Finally, the defendants
We have already explained why we believe that the ARDC proceeding was fairly strong evidence of notice that was relevant to the defendants' Cheek defense and willfulness. The defendants' contention to the contrary ignores both the sequence of events in the ARDC proceeding and the extent to which the proceeding involved not just Bartoli, but several of his co-defendants. Although the final order of disbarment did not issue until May 2002, the ARDC's original complaint was filed in November 1996 and was succeeded by an amended complaint in September 1998. We have discussed the reasons why Aegis and its principals would have an interest in the proceeding, notwithstanding the fact that Bartoli was the sole respondent. In fact, as we have noted, Bartoli, Vallone, and Hopper were all deposed in the course of the proceeding; and Robinson testified that she recalled taking a statement from Dunn. Bartoli, of course, regardless of his physical absence from the evidentiary hearing before the Hearing Board, was represented by counsel throughout the proceeding. The Hearing Board's Report and Recommendation was issued in February 2000, and a copy of that decision along with other Aegis materials, including a copy of Marutzky's testimony, was found in the Aegis offices. The alleged conspiracy was in full swing when the ARDC filed its complaint against Bartoli, and it persisted even after the Hearing Board's decision issued in early 2000. And, of course, Bartoli remained involved with Aegis long after his nominal retirement to South Carolina. For all of these reasons, the evidence concerning the ARDC proceeding was strong, not weak, evidence of notice.
Robinson's testimony about the lawsuit that four of the defendants filed before Judge Plunkett was also relevant as notice. Judge Plunkett's decision to dismiss the suit as frivolous, noting among other things that the Aegis system was not "a legal means to avoid paying taxes," R. 916 Tr. 2695, whether dicta or not, was yet another warning to the defendants that what they were doing was illegal.
As for the court's multiple interruptions of Bartoli's cross-examination of Robinson, we see nothing that constituted an abuse of discretion or was so unusual or unjustified as to suggest bias. Robinson, obviously, could not speak to what Bartoli's counsel did or did not tell Bartoli about what occurred in the ARDC proceeding. She could testify to whether Bartoli was physically present for the evidentiary hearing, and she did confirm that he was not. That the court interjected to clarify that it had admitted the ARDC evidence as proof of notice of what ultimately occurred in the proceeding, rather than notice of every detail of the proceeding, arguably was a legitimate effort to keep counsel as well as the jury focused on the purpose for which the evidence was offered. Finally, with respect to the lawsuit against the ARDC, the court's legitimate concern was that Bartoli's counsel might be trying to relitigate the validity of that
(2) Counts 11 through 34 of the indictment charged Bartoli, Vallone, Hopper, and Dunn with willfully aiding and assisting, procuring, counseling, and advising the preparation and presentation of the false and fraudulent income tax returns filed by multiple Aegis clients, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7206(2). The tax returns of Bruce and Tammy Groen and John and Colleen McNinney, were among the false and fraudulent returns underlying these charges. None of these four taxpayers testified at the trial; Bruce Groen, in fact, was deceased by that time. Instead, Internal Revenue Agent Michael Welch was permitted to testify about various aspects of their returns, including the reported income, claimed deductions, and income tax paid, as well as the substantial adjustment later made to those returns as a result of the audits that the IRS conducted. In addition, Welch testified that the returns appeared to have been signed by taxpayers and their preparer, CPA Laura Baxter. (Baxter was indicted separately for her role in supporting the Aegis scheme as a tax preparer.)
The defendants contend that Welch's testimony concerning these tax returns was contrary to Crawford v. Washington, 541 U.S. 36, 124 S.Ct. 1354, 158 L.Ed.2d 177 (2004), which essentially disapproved the admission, for their truth, of out-of-court testimonial statements that are not subject to cross-examination. Welch's testimony was meant to show that the tax returns in question fraudulently understated the taxpayers' income and that they had been signed by both the taxpayers (elsewhere identified as Aegis clients) and their tax preparer (elsewhere identified as an Aegis-approved preparer). As such, his testimony was one piece of the government's case for the notion that Bartoli,
Vallone, Hopper, and Dunn had aided and abetted the preparation of these tax returns in violation of section 7206(2). But, as an IRS agent, Welch obviously had no knowledge of any interactions that these taxpayers might have had with the defendants, and thus could not be cross-examined on any such interactions. In view of that fact, the defendants contend that allowing Welch to testify about the returns deprived them of their Sixth Amendment right of confrontation.
To summarize the defendants' argument is to see how misguided it is. Welch did not recount any out-of-court statements that the taxpayers in question may have made about any contact they had with any of the defendants. Welch instead testified as both a summary witness, identifying the tax returns and describing their contents, and as an expert, explaining the extent to which the returns had understated the taxpayers' actual income. See United States v. Pree, 408 F.3d 855, 869 (7th Cir.2005) (permissible for IRS agent to testify as an "expert summary witness," giving testimony that both summarizes what the evidence shows and analyzing the tax consequences of that evidence based on his own expertise). Insofar as Welch's testimony summarized what the tax returns themselves declared, it did not implicate the Confrontation Clause. As Crawford recognizes, the Confrontation Clause only applies to testimonial statements. 541 U.S. at 68, 124 S.Ct. at 1374. To describe what a taxpayer has claimed on a tax return is not to recount a testimonial statement. See United States v. Doughty, 460 F.2d 1360, 1363 n. 2 (7th Cir.1972) (testimony as to contents of tax return is not hearsay, because it is not offered for its truth but rather to show what was declared); United States v. Garth, 540 F.3d 766, 778 (8th Cir.2008) (testimony regarding tax returns filed by
Internal Revenue Agent James Pogue gave testimony regarding the investigation of an Aegis client, T. David Ring, and certain documents related to Ring that were recovered from defendant Cover's office. Pogue was involved in the civil audit that led to the Muhich decision as well as the audits of other taxpayers who were clients of Heritage and Aegis, including Ring. Ring ultimately became a client of Aegis, but he was a client of Heritage when he filed the 1993 income tax return that Pogue was investigating. Pogue was permitted, over objection, to read from a letter that Ring had written to Jennifer Sodaro, an attorney for Aegis. That letter related to the IRS investigation and a motion to quash a summons (which Ring mislabeled a "motion to squash") issued in connection with the IRS's investigation of his 1993 return. R. 949 Tr. 2813-15. The letter also mentioned that "Mike" would be getting back to Ring with a plan to eliminate his tax liability. The "Mike" to whom Ring was referring could have been either Michael Vallone or Michael Dowd. Id. Tr. 2833-35. Because Pogue could not clarify which "Mike" was being referenced, see id. Tr. 2837, the defendants contend that Pogue's testimony posed a Crawford problem.
We disagree. The letter from Ring to Sodaro was among the documents recovered from Cover's office. Pogue's testimony about what the letter said was not offered for its truth but rather to establish context for later testimony concerning backdated trust documents that Aegis personnel prepared for Ring. Id. Tr. 2817. Moreover, the defendants have made no showing that they were prejudiced by the letter's ambiguous reference to "Mike." On cross-examination of Pogue, the defense made clear that he had no idea who "Mike" was. Id. Tr. 2837.
IRS Special Agent Bernard Coleman led a team of ten agents who searched the premises of a business in Charleston, Illinois in March 2000.
Id. Tr. 2341. Counsel told the court he was not questioning the legality of the search warrant nor its execution, but instead wanted to explore some of the information contained in the affidavit submitted in support of the application for the warrant.
Id. Tr. 2343. The court denied counsel's request to question Coleman about the affidavit, reasoning that the affidavit was subsumed within the order of the court authorizing the search and was thus off-limits. Counsel clarified that he just wanted to inquire about the agent's knowledge. The court allowed counsel to ask Coleman if he knew of Dowd at the time he sought the warrant; Coleman replied that he was not sure. Counsel then attempted to show Coleman the affidavit — presumably to confirm that Dowd's name was not mentioned — but the court would not permit him to do so. The court indicated it would allow additional questions as to what Coleman knew at that time, and counsel was able to establish that Coleman knew of some twenty individuals whom he believed were involved with Aegis. But the court would not permit counsel to establish that Coleman's affidavit named these twenty individuals and that Dowd was not among them. The court also refused counsel's repeated requests for a sidebar so that he could articulate what he was attempting to elicit from Coleman. Ultimately, Dowd's counsel gave up. "Your Honor, I can't proceed, respectfully, based on the Court's rulings. I would like to develop a point, but I cannot." Id. Tr. 2348. "Then that's it," the court replied. Id.
There is little to make of this exchange. It seems clear that Dowd's counsel wanted to extract an acknowledgment from Coleman that Dowd was not one of the twenty alleged participants in the Aegis conspiracy who were named in the affidavit that Coleman prepared and presented to the federal magistrate who issued the search warrant. This was a minor point that ultimately had little, if anything, to do with Dowd's guilt or innocence on the charges. If there is more that Dowd's attorney wished to establish with Coleman, the defendants' brief does not identify what that was. Reasonable minds might differ as to whether the court ought to have allowed the question that Dowd's counsel wanted to pose (which we agree did not appear to in any way challenge the validity of the warrant and the ensuing search) and as to whether the court ought to have allowed counsel to clarify whatever point he wanted to make at sidebar. But the point that counsel was exploring was of such minimal relevance that it is difficult to understand why this is an illustration of bias on the part of the court.
Finally, the defendants contend that bias is evident from the fact that the district court allowed the government to
Again, we discern no impropriety that bespeaks bias or prejudice on the part of the district court. As we read the record, the district court allowed the government to question Vallone on specific passages from these documents because Vallone was admittedly aware of the ARDC proceedings and yet denied awareness of what specifically the ARDC had alleged and what the ARDC's Hearing Board later found. The court reasoned that questioning Vallone about the contents of these documents was an appropriate means of testing Vallone's credibility. Id. Tr. 5460-61. That rationale did not alter the purpose for which the court had admitted these documents into evidence. The court in fact reiterated that the documents had been admitted for purposes of notice. Id. Tr. 5461-62. We do not believe that the district court abused its discretion in allowing the government to ask Vallone whether or not he was aware of some of the specific charges and findings reflected in these documents. Copies of the documents were, after all, found in Aegis's headquarters, and it is reasonable to surmise that they were present because the Aegis principals had an interest in the ARDC proceeding. As we have discussed, the ARDC's charges, which were premised on the sham nature of the trusts marketed by Heritage and Aegis, struck at the heart of the Aegis scheme. The defendants, including Vallone, had every reason to pay attention to the ARDC proceeding. Given Vallone's awareness of the proceeding — indeed, his participation in that proceeding as a witness — one would think that he would have some knowledge of what the ARDC charged and what its Hearing Board later concluded, even if he did not read those documents. (Vallone conceded that he was aware of the contents of other documents that the government relied on for notice purposes, including IRS Notice 97-24.)
The fact that Vallone was one of the plaintiffs in the suit against the ARDC makes this inference all the more plausible. We add, as a last observation, that this questioning was not nearly as belabored as the defense suggests it was.
Cumulative Effect of Alleged Errors. Finally, the defendants make a catch-all
Vallone makes his own individual challenge to the instruction on conscious avoidance of knowledge that the court gave the jury over his objection (among others). Our earlier discussion of the defendants' joint challenge to this same instruction suffices to dispose of Vallone's challenge. We simply reiterate two points. First, a defendant's willful blindness to the law can merit a conscious avoidance instruction just as his willful blindness to the facts can. United States v. Stadtmauer, supra, 620 F.3d at 256-57. Second, there is ample evidence supporting an inference that Vallone in particular willfully blinded himself to the state of the law as to the validity of the Aegis system, and this evidence confirms the propriety of the instruction as to him. We have already discussed much of this evidence. To cite just a few salient examples: (1) After the Tax Court handed down its decision in Muhich, and Bartoli raised the possibility of soliciting a legal opinion from a law firm as to the legality of the Aegis system, Vallone opposed the proposal because he was not confident that the opinion would be positive. (2) When Parker suggested soliciting an opinion from the IRS, Vallone criticized that idea as "ridiculous." "because we know what the answer will be." R. 913 Tr. 1954. (3) At another meeting at the Aegis office headquarters in the fall of 1999, at which Bartoli, Vallone, Hopper, Parker, Dunn, and possibly Cover were present, Vallone and Hopper became embroiled in an argument over what actions Aegis clients should be advised to take in response to the audit notices they were receiving from the IRS. Hopper viewed the wave of notices as a sign that the government was about to bring an end to Aegis. "[I]t's over," Hopper told the others. R. 913 Tr. 1957. "[W]e're all going to jail." Id. Hopper argued that Aegis clients should be encouraged to do what they thought best, including finding legal representation. Vallone agreed that clients needed counsel, but argued that clients should be advised to consult only with attorneys approved by Aegis. Hopper, on the other hand, thought that clients should be free to act in their own interests. Their dispute grew more heated, culminating in a pronouncement by Vallone that "God will be the ultimate judge," or words to that effect. Id. Tr. 1959. Vallone's disagreement with Hopper signals his unwillingness to allow independent attorneys to look at the Aegis system as well as his ongoing refusal to acknowledge the government's view that the Aegis system was illegitimate. (4) Vallone spearheaded the creation and promotion of the Aegis Arsenal, which as we have said was essentially a means of obstructing any IRS inquiry into the Aegis trusts. (Earlier we cited a letter sent to the IRS by Parker on behalf of an Aegis client as an example of the Arsenal.) (5) Vallone, as we have mentioned, did not file income tax returns for a number of years. In response to the IRS's inquiry into why he had not, Vallone wrote a letter to the IRS in which he made a variety of baseless claims, including the
Cover challenges only his 160-month sentence. He makes no argument that the district court improperly applied Sentencing Guidelines in calculating the advisory Guidelines sentencing range, which was 210 to 262 months. His sole objection is to the substantive reasonableness of the sentence that the court imposed. Noting the court's obligation to consider the sentencing factors identified in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), Cover makes two principal points. His first centers on the threepoint increase in his offense level based on the district court's finding that he played a managerial or supervisory role in the offense by overseeing Dowd (whose role he characterizes as little more than a paper pusher and floor sweeper) and a number of tax preparers. See U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1(b).
Assessing Cover's sentence through the deferential abuse-of-discretion lens, see Gall v. United States, 552 U.S. 38, 51, 128 S.Ct. 586, 597, 169 L.Ed.2d 445 (2007); United States v. Bradley, 675 F.3d 1021, 1024 (7th Cir.2012), we cannot say that Cover's sentence was unreasonable. The sentence was fifty months below the low-end of the Guidelines range (210 to 262 months), which represents a nearly twenty-five
Dowd was found guilty of conspiracy, one count of mail fraud, and four counts of filing a false tax return. All three charges presume that Dowd knew the Aegis trusts were not a lawful means of tax avoidance. Under Cheek, his good faith belief in the legality of the trusts, even if it was mistaken, would thus preclude a finding that he conspired to defraud the United States and/or to commit a tax offense against the United States (Count One), that he used the U.S. mail in furtherance of a scheme to defraud (Count Three), or that he willfully made or subscribed to a false tax return (Counts Fifty-Two through Fifty-Five). See United States v. Hills, supra, 618 F.3d at 637 (conspiracy to defraud United States by impeding functions of IRS requires proof, inter alia, of agreement to accomplish illegal objective against United States and intent to defraud United States); United States v. Howard, 619 F.3d 723, 727 (7th Cir.2010) (mail fraud requires proof, inter alia, of intent to defraud, which entails "a wilful act by the defendant with the specific intent to deceive or cheat ...") (quoting United States v. Britton, 289 F.3d 976, 981 (7th Cir. 2002)); United States v. Kokenis, 662 F.3d 919, 930 (7th Cir.2011) ("Willfulness is an essential element of the tax evasion offenses charged under 26 U.S.C. § 7206(1).") (citing Hills, 618 F.3d at 634, 638-39).
Dowd contends that the government's proof was insufficient to overcome his Cheek defense, and that the district court therefore erred in denying his motions for a judgment of acquittal pursuant to Fed. R.Crim.P. 29. Dowd points out that he was just twenty-three years old when he joined Aegis, armed with a degree in business finance but no significant knowledge or experience with respect to trusts, estate planning, or taxes. He had never before encountered a business trust, but was told by both his father and Cover that it was an
We review the denial of Dowd's Rule 29 motions de novo. E.g., United States v. Hassebrock, 663 F.3d 906, 918 (7th Cir.2011), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 132 S.Ct. 2377, 182 L.Ed.2d 1018 (2012). But we will find the evidence insufficient only if the record is devoid of evidence from which a reasonable jury could find Dowd guilty beyond a reasonable doubt. Cavazos v. Smith, ___ U.S. ___, 132 S.Ct. 2, 4, 181 L.Ed.2d 311 (2011) (per curiam). This is an "onerous burden" for Dowd. Hills, 618 F.3d at 637. In assessing the sufficiency of the evidence, we consider the trial record in the light most favorable to the government, granting it the benefit of all reasonable inferences. E.g., id.
The government presented ample evidence from which a jury could conclude that Dowd lacked a good faith belief in the legality of the Aegis trust system. First, Dowd admitted that he saw various documents that called into question the legitimacy of the Aegis trusts. Among these were IRS Notice 97-24, R. 922 Tr. 6416-17, 6460-61, the Tax Court's decision in Muhich, id. Tr. 6473-80, 6490-99; a memorandum from the Aegis legal department summarizing what characteristics the IRS looks at in assessing the legitimacy of a trust (e.g., the deduction of personal expenses), id. Tr. 6467-69; and an article in the WALL STREET JOURNAL, id. Tr. 6409-10. He acknowledged that he read and understood these items. R. 922 Tr. 6461-67, 6473-81, 6490-99.
The evidence was also more than sufficient to establish Dowd's guilt on the false tax return charges. First, the amply-supported inference that Dowd understood the Aegis system to be a sham in turn supports an inference that he knew, as a consequence of his own use of that system, that he was under-reporting his income on his individual income tax returns. (There was ample testimony, by the way, that Dowd did under-report his income on his own tax returns. R. 971 Tr. 4522-42; R. 939 Tr. 6558-63.) Second, Dowd — like other defendants and Aegis clients generally — was not just underreporting his income but doing so to a patently ridiculous degree. To cite one example, in 1999, Dowd had income of $60,000, but he reported only $5,250 of that total on his federal income tax return, an amount so low that he (nominally) qualified for — and claimed — an earned income tax credit. R. 939 Tr. 6559-60. Recall that claiming that same tax credit is the very type of thing that Hopper joked about at Aegis seminars. It is an entirely reasonable inference that even a young, deferential, and purportedly naive individual would realize that something was wrong with reporting less than ten percent of his income to the government and claiming a tax credit meant for the working poor.
Before the trial commenced, Dowd made an oral motion to sever his own case from those of his co-defendants after the district court announced it would allow evidence regarding the Bartoli ARDC proceeding as proof of notice to the defendants. Dowd's counsel characterized the ARDC evidence as a "bombshell" that would have a prejudicial
Demonstrating prejudicial error in the district court's refusal to sever Dowd's trial would be an uphill battle. We would review that decision under the deferential abuse-of-discretion standard. E.g., United States v. Del Valle, 674 F.3d 696, 704 (7th Cir.2012), petition for cert. filed (U.S. Aug. 16, 2012) (No. 12-219). There is a preference for the joint trial of defendants who are charged together. United States v. Souffront, 338 F.3d 809, 828 (7th Cir.2003) (citing Zafiro v. United States, 506 U.S. 534, 537, 113 S.Ct. 933, 937, 122 L.Ed.2d 317 (1993)). When the defendants have been properly joined in a single indictment pursuant to Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 8(b), as is conceded here, a court should grant a severance only when "there is a serious risk that a joint trial would compromise a specific trial right of one of the defendants, or prevent the jury from making a reliable judgment about guilt or innocence." Id. (quoting Zafiro, 506 U.S. at 539, 113 S.Ct. at 938). In challenging the denial of his request for a severance, the defendant must show that the refusal to sever resulted in "actual prejudice" that deprived him of a fair trial. Id. (citing United States v. Rollins, 301 F.3d 511, 518 (7th Cir.2002)). Relevant to the question of prejudice would be (a) the district court's instruction to the jury that it was to consider each defendant individually (R. 925 Tr. 7389; Seventh Circuit Pattern Criminal Jury Instruction No. 4.05); (b) as we have discussed, the district court never communicated its theory that notice of illegality to one conspirator, or notice to the conspiracy generally, constitutes notice to all members of the conspiracy; (c) the government argued notice as an individual matter, and each defendant was free to argue that he did not have notice that the Aegis system was illegitimate; and (d) despite the court's express invitation, Dowd never tendered a cautionary instruction as to the ARDC evidence that he contends was so prejudicial.
However, Dowd's failure to renew his motion to sever at the close of evidence precludes us from reaching the merits of his argument on appeal. As the government points out, "[a] motion for severance is typically waived if it is not renewed at the close of evidence, primarily because it is then that any prejudice which may have resulted from the joint trial is ascertainable." United States v. Williams, 553 F.3d 1073, 1079 (7th Cir.2009) (quoting United States v. Phillips, 239 F.3d 829, 838 (7th Cir.2001)); see also United States v. Ross, 510 F.3d 702, 711 (7th Cir.2007) (coll. cases). Dowd, in his opening brief, offered no explanation for his failure to renew the motion. In his reply brief, he belatedly argues that renewal of the motion would have been futile in light of the
The district court overruled Dowd's objection to the probation officer's pre-sentence report ("PSR"), which did not grant him a two-level reduction in his offense level for being a minor participant in the offense. See U.S.S.G. § 3B1.2(b). The court reasoned:
R. 1039 at 62-63.
Dowd contends that the court clearly erred in denying him this reduction. See, e.g., United States v. Smith, 674 F.3d 722, 728 (7th Cir.2012) (district court's findings as to defendants' role in the offense are reviewed for clear error), petition for cert. filed (U.S. Sept. 14, 2012) (No. 12-325). Dowd argues that as an administrative assistant, he occupied an entry level position in Aegis, for which he was paid roughly $25,000 per year. As we have discussed, he represents that he was not sophisticated in the laws governing trusts, taxation, or offshore banking and that he did not comprehend the scope and nature of the Aegis scheme; instead, he trusted his father, Vallone, Bartoli and others who assured him that Aegis was legitimate. The PSR acknowledged that Dowd did not create the Aegis scheme, did not manage other participants, and did not receive the largest share of profits from the scheme. Dowd contends that he did not profit from the scheme at all. Finally, he points out that he was named in just ten of 114 overt acts listed in the indictment.
Although we agree that Dowd played a lesser role in the offense than other defendants, we are not left with the definite and firm conviction that the court erred in declining to treat him as a minor participant in the offense. See Smith, 674 F.3d at 728. The commentary to Guidelines section 3B1.2 defines a minor participant as one who is substantially less culpable than the average participant in the offense and who is less culpable than most other participants, but whose role cannot be described as minimal. § 3B1.2, comment. (n.5). In assessing a defendant's relative culpability, a court must consider all of the individuals who participated in the offense, not just those who have been convicted. See id. (n.1); U.S.S.G. § 3B1.1, comment. (n.1). Dowd participated in the Aegis scheme for a period of five years. He may have started out as an administrative assistant, but his role in the offense ultimately went far beyond that. The district court found that Dowd "was very actively engaged" "on a day-to-day basis" during that time (R. 1039 at 62-63), and the evidence certainly supports that finding. He had check-signing authority so that he could pay Aegis's bills. He was the primary person who dealt with Jenkins in Belize to arrange for the requisite documentation as to offshore companies and trusts for Aegis clients and to ensure that clients made demands on their promissory
The district court ordered Dowd incarcerated for a period of 120 months, which he contends was an unreasonably harsh sentence given his degree of culpability relative to the other defendants. Again, Dowd emphasizes that he was neither the instigator nor a leader of the Aegis scheme but rather someone who happened into it by taking a job with Heritage at the suggestion of his father and with no intent to become a felon. He likens himself to the "accidental criminal" lured into the scheme, as discussed in United States v. Nachamie, 121 F.Supp.2d 285, 296 (S.D.N.Y.2000), j. aff'd, 5 Fed.Appx. 95 (2d Cir.2001). Dowd also contends that the district court failed to give meaningful consideration to the sentencing factors identified in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a). In particular, Dowd contends that the court ignored the fact that holding him responsible for a loss amount of $50 million vastly overstated his culpability and resulted in a Guidelines sentencing range that was "grossly disproportional" to his relatively minor role in the offense. Dowd Br. 40. In that respect, Dowd (like other defendants) was put at a disadvantage by a 2008 change in the Guidelines, which resulted in more punitive offense levels for losses of this magnitude. At the same time, he believes the court did not give serious consideration to mitigating factors that included his strong family ties, lack of criminal history, employment as an airline pilot, and the prospect that he would lose his pilot's license as a result of his conviction. Dowd believes that the unreasonableness of the 120-month sentence imposed on him is evident from the fact that it is the same length as the penalty imposed on Bartoli, who was among the most culpable participants, and only forty months less than that imposed on Cover, who was also much more culpable.
The sentence imposed on Dowd, being one month below the low end of the advisory Guidelines range, is one that we presume to be reasonable, e.g., United States v. Russell, 662 F.3d 831, 853 (7th Cir.2011), cert. denied, ___ U.S. ___, 132 S.Ct. 1816, 182 L.Ed.2d 634 (2012), and Dowd has not succeeded in rebutting that presumption. Dowd's situation is sympathetic
We may assume that another judge might have imposed a lesser sentence on Dowd. But for all of the reasons we have cited, we cannot conclude that Judge Norgle abused his discretion in concluding that a sentence one month below the bottom of the range advised by the Sentencing Guidelines was unreasonable. See United States v. Tahzib, 513 F.3d 692, 695 (7th Cir.2008) (below-Guidelines sentence will almost never be unreasonable).
As we have indicated, a relatively recent change in the Guidelines resulted in an increase to Dowd's offense level and the resulting Guidelines sentencing range. The November 2000 version of the Guidelines in effect at the time Dowd's offense conduct ended specified a base offense level of 25 for a $50 million dollar loss amount (see U.S.S.G. § 2T4.1(T) (Nov. 2000)), whereas the November 2008 version of the Guidelines that the district court applied at sentencing specified an offense level of 28 for that loss amount (see U.S.S.G. § 2T4.1(L) (Nov. 2008)) — a difference of three levels. Had the district court applied the earlier version, the advisory sentencing range would have been 87 to 108 months rather than 121 to 151 months. Dowd contends that relying on the later version amounts to a violation of his rights under the ex post facto clause of the Constitution. See U.S. CONST. Art. I, sec. 9, cl. 3
We have already rejected the ex post facto argument that Dowd is making. See United States v. Demaree, 459 F.3d 791, 793-95 (7th Cir.2006). Dowd invites us to reconsider Demaree, but we have repeatedly declined similar invitations. E.g., United States v. Wasson, supra, 679 F.3d at 951.
The jury convicted Hopper on all counts in which he was charged. He moved pursuant to Rule 29 for a judgment of acquittal both at the close of the government's
Hopper's position is that he had a much stronger Cheek defense than his fellow defendants, and that the government failed to overcome it. He asserts that his good faith in the legitimacy of the Aegis system is demonstrated by the fact that when he eventually came to realize that the system was a sham, he took steps to separate himself from the conspiracy. Until the Tax Court issued its June 1999 decision in Muhich, Hopper argues, he genuinely believed that the Aegis system was legitimate. Once that decision was issued, he began to have doubts. He spoke with others at Aegis in an effort to determine what, in fact, was lawful. And when Vallone proposed the Audit Arsenal as a means of thwarting IRS inquiry, Hopper opposed him. (Recall Parker's testimony regarding the fall 1999 showdown between Vallone and Hopper.) When his efforts to pursue a more constructive response to the IRS inquiries facing Aegis "clients proved unavailing, he resigned his position as the Managing Director of Aegis in a letter to Vallone dated January 17, 2000.
Although Hopper's Cheek defense was, in some superficial respects, more appealing than those of other defendants, the record is by no means devoid of evidence from which the jury could reasonably find that Hopper lacked a subjective good faith belief in the legality of the Aegis system even prior to the Tax Court's decision in Muhich and his subsequent decision to resign from Aegis. On the contrary. From the very beginning, the Aegis trust system was obviously and incontrovertibly at odds with the fundamental proposition that the tax liability on income and assets rests with the individual who controls those assets. The ways in which the Aegis
Gov't Ex. Priess Tr. 2 (Gov't Supp. App. 246), Gov't Ex. Priess Video DVD. Hopper also told seminar attendees in 1995 that he was taking tax deductions for obviously personal expenses such as clothes, exercise equipment, and cable television. Gov't Ex. Coleman Tr. 2-5 (Gov't Supp. App. 93-96). He even boasted that his reported income was so low that he qualified for an Earned Income Tax Credit from the IRS and financial aid for his daughters to attend college. Gov't Ex. Coleman Tr. 6-7 (Gov't Supp. App. 97-98). As outrageous as these statements were, they were not simply exaggerations but rather outright falsehoods, in the sense that Hopper did not file any federal income tax returns at all from 1995 through 2002. Instead, he was periodically writing to the IRS contending that he owed no taxes, even as he was earning hundreds of thousands of dollars from Aegis. (He earned a total of $701,000 from 1997 through 2000.) A jury might reasonably infer from these facts that Hopper had not been led astray by his more sophisticated co-defendants as to the legitimacy of the Aegis system but understood all along that the system was merely a shell game, and one that he eagerly embraced and used to his own profit.
There is also evidence undermining Hopper's contention that he was a true believer in the legitimacy of the Aegis system until the Muhich decision set him straight. Muhich, as the government points out, was not the first warning of illegality that the defendants received. IRS Notice 97-24, issued more than two years prior to the Tax Court's decision, specifically addressed abusive trusts very much like the Aegis trusts and touched upon such highly relevant points as the deductibility of personal expenses:
IRS Notice 97-24 at 3 (citing, inter alia, Schulz v. C.I.R., supra, 686 F.2d 490). And the ARDC complaint issued against Bartoli in November 1996 asserted that Bartoli was defrauding Heritage and Aegis clients by representing to them that the CBO and trust systems Aegis was peddling would minimize, if not eliminate, their tax liability, when, in reality, "applicable trust, tax and common law do not recognize the CBO, as employed by Aegis[] and [Bartoli], as a viable entity formed for the purpose of eliminating or reducing taxes." R. 961 Tr. 2652; Gov't Ex. ARDC 1. As we noted earlier, the jury could infer that Hopper, along with other defendants, was aware of the ARDC proceeding given that he was one of the witnesses deposed in the course of that proceeding. Indeed, it was Hopper who
Moreover, whatever distance Hopper eventually may have put between himself and the other defendants in 2000 with respect to such aspects of the Aegis scheme as the Fortress Trust and the Audit Arsenal, there is also evidence that he was by no means averse to participating in efforts to throw roadblocks in the path of the government as it sought to expose and unwind the defendants' crimes. He was, after all, one of the plaintiffs in the lawsuit against IRS auditor Pogue and the ARDC in 1997 that Judge Plunkett later dismissed as frivolous in November 1999, sanctioning the plaintiffs for their "fictional claims." Bartoli v. ARDC, supra, 1999 WL 1045210, at *3.
Finally, although Hopper now contends that it was Muhich that caused him to see the light and to withdraw from Aegis, his behavior subsequent to that June 1999 decision was not wholly consistent with that of a convert. In November 1999, five months after the Muhich decision, Hopper signed a corporate resolution confirming that he along with Vallone and Bartoli shared equal management authority over Aegis. R. 950 Tr. 3838-41; R. 910 Tr. 6226; Gov't Ex. Aegis Office 80. And although Hopper eventually did resign as the Managing Director of Aegis in January 2000, he continued to provide consulting services and support until May 2000 and did not formally break off his ties with Vallone until June 2000 (more on that below). He continued to receive money from Aegis until June 2000 and from Aegis Management Company (which provided management services to trust clients) until December 2000. See Gov't Ex. Hopper Income Summary.
We may assume for the sake of argument that a jury could have been persuaded by Hopper's Cheek defense. He was neither an attorney nor an accountant, and he ultimately did end his involvement in the Aegis scheme somewhat sooner than other defendants. In the fall of 1999, he also voiced reservations to his co-conspirators about the Audit Arsenal and argued that Aegis clients ought to be encouraged to seek out legal representation of their own. But as we have discussed, the jury reasonably could infer from Hopper's own words and deeds that he understood the essentially fraudulent nature of the Aegis system from the start, that he continued his involvement in the defendants' scheme — and continued to profit from it — long after he and the other defendants received notice that the Aegis system was not a valid means of tax minimization, and that he joined the other defendants in seeking to block exposure of the scheme. From all of this, the jury could reasonably find that Hopper did not have a good faith belief in the legality of the Aegis system and instead willfully conspired and schemed to defraud the government.
A few additional words are in order as to Hopper's convictions on the counts of the indictment charging him
Hopper contends that the district court clearly erred in holding him responsible for a loss amount in excess of $50 million, because that total included losses associated with the 2000 tax year (i.e., tax returns filed in 2001 for 2000) despite his (purported) withdrawal from the conspiracy and scheme to defraud in early 2000.
Because the facts support the district court's finding that Hopper did not withdraw from the conspiracy early in 2000, it was appropriate to charge Hopper with the additional tax losses that occurred in the 2000 tax year. See U.S.S.G. § 1B1.3(a)(1)(A), (B) and (a)(3) (defendant's relevant conduct includes all harm resulting from his own acts and all reasonably foreseeable acts of others in furtherance of jointly undertaken criminal activity). As there is no dispute that these additional losses caused the total loss amount to exceed $50 million, there was no error in the loss-amount calculation or in the offense-level calculations that turned on the loss amount.
In calculating Hopper's offense level, the district court used the 2008 Guidelines in effect at the time of his sentencing rather than the November 2000 version in effect in the waning days of the offense. As was true in Dowd's case, this worked to Hopper's disadvantage, in that the newer version of the Guidelines specified a significantly higher offense level for losses in excess of $50 million. Under the November 2000 Guidelines, Hopper's adjusted offense level would have been five levels lower than it was under the 2008 Guidelines (compare U.S.S.G. § 2T4.1(T) (2000) (specifying a base offense level of 25) with U.S.S.G. § 2T4.1(M) (2008) (specifying
As Hopper acknowledges, our decision in United States v. Demaree, supra, 459 F.3d at 794-95, forecloses his ex post facto argument. Like Dowd, Hopper invites us to reconsider Demaree, but, as we have noted, we have already rejected multiple invitations to do so. E.g., United States v. Wasson, supra, 679 F.3d at 951.
Finally, Hopper argues that the government boosted the loss amount, and thus his Guidelines sentencing range, by not acting sooner than it did to stop what the defendants were doing. Hopper notes that Special Agent Priess commenced his undercover investigation of the Aegis CBO scheme in 1996, attended a series of Aegis seminars in that year and the ensuing three years, and (still in his undercover capacity) held conversations with a number of the defendants, tax preparers working with Aegis, and individual taxpayers during that time. No later than 1998, Hopper reasons, the government had all of the information that it needed to conclude that the Aegis system was a criminal tax-avoidance system. Yet, not until March 2000, when it executed the search warrant on Aegis's headquarters did it begin to signal to the defendants their criminal exposure, and at no time prior to the indictment in 2004 did it seek to enjoin the defendants' activities. In effect, Hopper suggests, the government engaged in sentencing manipulation by allowing the tax losses resulting from the scheme to continue mounting, exposing him to a much longer sentence as a consequence of the delay.
A variation of Hopper's argument could be made in any number of cases, particularly those involving undercover investigations of large-scale criminal activity with many participants. Typically, the government's goal is to build a strong evidentiary case that is likely to result in the conviction not just of low-level players but also the leaders and instigators of the scheme; and that takes time. We know of no legal principle that requires the government to intervene to stop ongoing non-violent criminal activity as soon as it arguably has a sufficient case to prosecute the defendants.
But the dispositive point is that this circuit does not recognize sentencing manipulation. E.g., United States v. Mandel, 647 F.3d 710, 720 n. 3 (7th Cir.2011); United States v. Long, 639 F.3d 293, 300-01 (7th Cir.2011). Moreover, to the extent Hopper is simply arguing that the government's delay in intervening to stop the scheme constitutes a factor that should have been considered in mitigation under section 3553(a), we repeat the observation that we made in United States v. Knox, 573 F.3d 441, 452 (7th Cir.2009): "Although the agent's tactics had the effect of increasing [the defendant's] guidelines sentencing range, it also served the legitimate purpose of investigating the full extent of [the defendant's criminal activity...." (citing United States v. Wagner, 467 F.3d 1085, 1090 (7th Cir.2006) ("It is within the discretion of law enforcement to decide whether delaying the arrest of the suspect will help ensnare co-conspirators, give law enforcement greater understanding of the nature of the criminal enterprise, or allow the suspect enough `rope to hang himself.'")).
The district court increased Hopper's offense level by four points pursuant to
Our review of the district court's decision to impose the organizer/leader enhancement rather than the managerial enhancement is for clear error, e.g., United States v. Smith, supra, 674 F.3d at 728, and the court did not clearly err in choosing to apply the former. Factors bearing on the appropriate label to give the defendant's role in the offense "include the exercise of decision making authority, the nature of participation in the commission of the offense, the recruitment of accomplices, the claimed right to a larger share of the fruits of the crime, the degree of participation in the planning or organizing of the offense, the nature and scope of the illegal activity, and the degree of control and authority exercised over others." § 3B1.1, comment. (n.4). "No one of these factors is considered a prerequisite to the enhancement, and, at the same time, the factors are not necessarily entitled to equal weight." United States v. Wasz, 450 F.3d 720, 729 (7th Cir.2006) (citing United States v. Matthews, 222 F.3d 305, 307 (7th Cir.2000)). "And although the nature and purposes of the enhancement certainly require the defendant to have played a leading role in the offense, he need not literally have been the boss of his cohorts in order to qualify for the enhancement, for a leader can influence others through indirect as well as direct means[.]" Id. at 729-30. Hopper was a founder and, until 2000, the managing director of Aegis. He held ownership interests in both Aegis and Aegis Management Company. Along with Bartoli and Vallone, he claimed a substantial share of the profits of Aegis, earning over $1.6 million from Aegis and related companies from 1994 through 2000. Gov't Ex. Hopper Income Summary (Gov't Supp. App. 200). Hopper and Vallone certainly had their disagreements, and according to Hopper it was ultimately his inability to stop Vallone from attempting to obstruct IRS audits that caused him to leave the company in 2000. But as we have pointed out, as late as November 1999, a resolution adopted by the Aegis Board of Directors (and signed by Hopper) recognized that Hopper shared management authority over the company equally with Vallone and
In the wake of Booker, a district court in choosing a reasonable sentence must not presume, as we may, that a sentence within the range advised by the Guidelines is reasonable. See Gall v. United States, supra, 552 U.S. at 50, 128 S.Ct. at 596-97; Rita v. United States, 551 U.S. 338, 351, 127 S.Ct. 2456, 2465, 168 L.Ed.2d 203 (2007). Instead, after ascertaining the Guidelines sentencing range, the court must consult the statutory sentencing factors set forth in section 3553(a) and determine independently what sentence is reasonable. Gall, 552 U.S. at 49-50, 128 S.Ct. at 596; e.g., United States v. Young, 590 F.3d 467, 473-74 (7th Cir. 2009); see also United States v. Robertson, 662 F.3d 871, 880 (7th Cir.2011) ("A sentencing court need not comprehensively discuss each of the factors listed in 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a), but it must give the reasons for its sentencing decision and address all of a defendant's principal arguments that `are not so weak as to not merit discussion.'") (quoting United States v. Cunningham, 429 F.3d 673, 679 (7th Cir. 2005)). Among other things, section 3553(a) commands that the sentence must be sufficient but not greater than necessary to serve the sentencing aims set out in the statute. E.g., United States v. Pennington, 667 F.3d 953, 957 (7th Cir.2012). Hopper contends that the district court violated this so-called "parsimony" admonition here by giving too much weight to the advisory Guidelines range, which in this case was driven to a significant extent by the loss amount of more than $50 million. The court acknowledged the set of mitigating factors that supported a lower sentence, including the abuse that Hopper had suffered as a child, his military service in Vietnam, the injuries he incurred during that service and the post-traumatic stress disorder he continues to experience as a result of that service, the physical ailments (including degenerative arthritis) from which he suffers, his age (sixty-three at the time of sentencing), his strong relationship with his wife and children, his sincere remorse, and certain efforts he made to rectify his criminal wrongdoing. R. 1085 at 45-48, 50-51, 52. And the court ultimately did impose a sentence thirty-five months below the bottom of the Guidelines range. But, according to Hopper, the court believed itself constrained by the loss amount from deviating too far from the Guidelines range absent a compelling justification for doing so. The court thus committed a legal error, in Hopper's view, by treating the Guidelines, and in particular the loss amount, as limiting the extent to which it could impose a sentence below the Guidelines sentencing range, even if the mitigating factors otherwise weighed in favor of a substantially below-Guidelines sentence. See, e.g., United States v. Grigg, 442 F.3d 560, 565-66 (7th Cir.2006).
We reject this argument. Our review of the sentencing transcript convinces us that the district court merely viewed the loss amount as a significant factor — in the court's words, "one of the heaviest factors" — that weighed against a lower sentence, not one that tied the court's hands. R. 1085 at 44. The court expressly acknowledged that it could not presume a
Finally, Hopper challenges the reasonableness of the sentence that the district court imposed on him. The court ordered Hopper to serve a sentence of 200 months. Although the sentence was 35 months below the low end of the range advised by the Guidelines, Hopper nonetheless contends it was excessive and therefore unreasonable. Hopper emphasizes the mitigating factors that the district court itself acknowledged in arriving at the sentence and which we have already mentioned. For a man in his sixties, Hopper argues, a 200-month sentence is a life sentence. In arriving at that sentence, Hopper again argues, the district court was fixated on the loss amount to the exclusion of the many mitigating factors which demonstrate that a much lower sentence would be reasonable.
As a below-Guidelines sentence, Hopper's sentence is presumptively reasonable, e.g., United States v. Russell, supra, 662 F.3d at 853, and Hopper has not succeeded in rebutting that presumption. We acknowledge that the sentence will require Hopper to spend most, if not all, of his remaining years in prison. See id. at 852-53. However, his offense was one that took place over a substantial period of time, enticed over six hundred taxpayers into a fraudulent scheme of tax evasion, and resulted in tens of millions of dollars of lost revenue to the government. We have no reason to question the sincerity of the remorse that Hopper expressed at sentencing, but Hopper's offense evidenced much more than a fleeting lapse in judgment: Beginning in 1994, Hopper knowingly and willfully engaged in a scheme to defy the tax laws and defraud the government; and he had continued to perpetrate the scheme even as he was repeatedly put on notice that what he and his co-defendants were doing was illegal. Hopper, being at the head of the scheme along with Bartoli and Vallone, was well situated to appreciate the magnitude of the fraud he and his codefendants were perpetrating. Tax evasion has a long and storied history in this country, and Hopper joins a long list of practitioners that includes Al Capone, Spiro Agnew, and Leona Helmsley. But the scheme that Hopper and his partners perpetrated was particularly insidious. Perhaps a different judge might have deemed a more modest sentence sufficient to serve the aims of sentencing set forth in section 3553(a)(2). But examining Hopper's sentence pursuant to the deferential, abuse-of-discretion standard, see Gall, 552 U.S. at 51, 128 S.Ct. at 597, we cannot say that it was unreasonable.
Dunn's opening contention is that the district court committed legal error in treating the Guidelines as mandatory. As we have discussed, after Booker, the Guidelines are advisory rather than mandatory. The district court's ultimate obligation
But we do not believe that the district court was operating under any misconception that it was bound by the Guidelines. Although the court's use of the term "leeway" is somewhat similar to the language of obligation that we have said is inconsistent with a court's duty after Booker to treat the Guidelines as a reference point but not as a mandate, e.g., United States v. Pennington, supra, 667 F.3d at 958 (court stated it must "follow" the Guidelines), in context it is clear that the court in no sense was treating the Guidelines as either binding or presumptively correct as to the recommended sentence. Much as it had with Hopper, the court noted that the key factor in determining Dunn's base offense level under the Guidelines was the size of the tax loss, and it was in view of the size of that loss that the court saw little justification for imposing a sentence below the Guidelines range. R. 1086 at 27-28, 29, 35. The balance of the court's sentencing remarks make clear that the court was wholly aware that it had both the authority to impose a non-Guidelines sentence as well as the duty to determine a reasonable sentence independent of what the Guidelines recommended. Id. at 30-31. The court considered the full range of the factors that Dunn's counsel had cited in support of a below-Guidelines sentence — including his challenging youth, his ethic of hard work and self-improvement, his friendship and generosity to others, and his reputation as a good and honest man. Id. at 32-33. Still, the court believed that "the nature and the circumstances of the offense," id. at 32, including the "extremely conservative figure" of the $60 million loss, id. at 28, outweighed these mitigating factors, id. at 33. The court emphasized that "[t]his was not a simple, one-time impulsive act," id., and pointed out that Dunn had shown no remorse, id. at 34. Ultimately, the court found, in light of the statutory sentencing factors, that the Guidelines range was "a fair range," id. at 34, and imposed a sentence at the bottom of that range.
As noted, the district court held Dunn responsible for a loss amount of $60 million — i.e., the full amount of the loss resulting from the Aegis scheme. Dunn challenges the loss amount on two grounds. First, he questions the accuracy of the method that the government used to calculate the total loss, which loss the district court cited as an "overriding consideration"
There was no such error here. The Guidelines themselves recommend use of the twenty-eight percent rate in estimating the loss amount in tax fraud cases. U.S.S.G. § 2T1.1(c)(1)(A). Assuming that the income of each Aegis client would have been taxed at a rate of twenty-eight percent is, if anything, a conservative approach, as it is entirely possible that the income of some clients would have exceeded the twenty-eight percent tax bracket and would therefore have been subject to a higher marginal rate. Indeed, given the evidence that Aegis targeted high income individuals, this may be more of a likelihood than a mere possibility. See R. 963 Tr. 4852-55. Thus, even recognizing, as Welch himself did, that reasonable people might differ as to the best way of determining a tax loss in this case, it does not follow that there was an obvious flaw in the approach that Welch followed. See United States v. Julian, 427 F.3d 471, 482 (7th Cir.2005) (plain error is one that is obvious in retrospect); United States v. Mandel, supra, 647 F.3d at 722-23 (divergent holdings among courts demonstrate that any error district court may have committed was not plain). Nor does the fact that the IRS in one case settled an audit for a figure far less than the amount that Welch had estimated as the loss call into question the reliability of his calculations. As the government points out, the IRS might choose to accept a settlement far below the estimated tax due for any number of reasons. The record as to this one case is insufficient to cast doubt on the loss amount figure that the district court employed.
Second, although Dunn terminated his employment with Aegis, he did not legally withdraw from the conspiracy. As we have already discussed with respect to Hopper, a legally effective withdrawal requires
Pursuant to Guidelines section 3B1.1(b), the district court enhanced Dunn's offense level by three points for being a manager or supervisor. R. 1086 at 4-5, 29. Dunn contends on appeal that the court clearly erred in applying this enhancement, because he in fact played no managerial or supervisory role in the Aegis scheme. Dunn contends that he did not oversee any other participant in the scheme, did not manage any Aegis assets or activities, did not possess any decision-making authority as to the scheme's goals or means of attaining those goals, and did not help to plan or organize the offense. He was merely "a salesman following orders," Dunn Br. 16, playing a relatively minor role in a fairly extensive organization. Our review is again one for clear error. United States v. Smith, supra, 674 F.3d at 728.
The court did not clearly err in treating Dunn as a manager or supervisor. The court appears to have based the enhancement in part on a finding that Dunn recruited attorney Parker into the scheme. R. 1086 at 4-5; see § 3B1.1, comment. (n.4) (citing the recruitment of accomplices as a relevant factor in determining whether leadership enhancement appropriate); e.g., United States v. Cerna, 676 F.3d 605, 608 (7th Cir.2012). Dunn contends that it is implausible to say that he recruited Parker, given Parker's acknowledgment at the trial that it was his brother-in-law, Dennis Repka, a retired judge, and not Dunn, who introduced him to the Aegis system of trusts in June 1996. R. 913 Tr. 1939. But Dunn omits the material fact that Parker did not actually become involved in the conspiracy and scheme until Dunn asked him in March 2007 if he would be interested in creating CBO trusts for Aegis and offered to pay him $1,000 for each Aegis closing that he handled. R. 961 Tr. 1832, 1836-37. Parker accepted the offer. Parker also testified that he completed the paperwork for approximately fifteen closings for Dunn following the instructions that Dunn gave him as to how the documents should be dated. R. 961 Tr. 1839; R. 1014 Tr. 1879-80. The district court therefore had a sound evidentiary basis for finding that Dunn had in fact
The district court ordered Dunn to serve a prison term of 210 months, a sentence at the bottom of the range recommended by the Guidelines. Dunn contends that the sentence is substantively unreasonable, because the district court either failed to consider or did not give appropriate weight to a number of the factors identified as relevant by section 3553(a), including Dunn's background and characteristics, the sentences imposed on his co-defendants, and the nature and severity of his offense. First, given his age at the time of sentencing (forty-nine), Dunn argues that a sentence of seventeen years is effectively a life sentence. By contrast, he notes, the District of Columbia Circuit upheld a sentence of 108 months for an individual it characterized as possibly "the largest tax evader in the history of the country." United States v. Anderson, 545 F.3d 1072, 1073-74 (D.C.Cir.2008) (loss amount exceeding $100 million). Even that sentence represented a substantial upward variance from the high end of the range recommended by the version of the Guidelines that the defendant argued was applicable. Still, it is little more than half of the penalty imposed on Dunn. Second, Dunn points out that the defendants in this case faced basically the same set of charges and all had the same lack of prior criminal history, yet there are significant disparities in the sentences they received. For example, Dunn's sentence was ten months longer than that of Hopper, who was convicted of twenty-six counts to Dunn's fifteen and was one of the Aegis principals. Dunn was also ordered to serve fifty more months than Cover; and his sentence is almost twice as long as that of Bartoli, who conceived of the scheme. Third, Dunn points out that the district court held Dunn culpable for the full breadth of the scheme and ignored his purported withdrawal in 2000.
Dunn's sentence is at the bottom of the Guidelines range, which was properly calculated, so we presume that it is reasonable, e.g., United States v. Fouse, 578 F.3d 643, 654-55 (7th Cir.2009); and Dunn has not persuaded us that it is otherwise when examined against the sentencing factors identified in section 3553(a), see United States v. Mykytiuk, 415 F.3d 606, 608 (7th Cir.2005).
As to the sentences of his co-defendants: Bartoli and Cover were each given significant reductions in their sentences either because of their advanced age: Bartoli was eighty years old when he was sentenced and Cover was seventy-two. Even so, their sentences are much more likely to be life sentences than Dunn's is: with credit for good time, Dunn will be in his midsixties
Dunn's observation that his sentence is nearly twice the term imposed on the defendant in Anderson, the D.C. Circuit case is explained by a number of distinctions, including most prominently the fact that the 2000 version of the Guidelines under which Anderson was sentenced were significantly more lenient as to large-scale tax frauds. That is why a number of Dunn's co-defendants have made ex post facto arguments with respect to the district court's use of the 2008 Guidelines in sentencing them. The lesser sentence imposed (and sustained) in Anderson thus does not call into question the reasonableness of Dunn's sentence.
Nor does the fact that the court in sentencing Dunn held him to account for all of the consequences of the conspiracy, including the total loss amount, give us pause. Dunn contends that his liability should have ended with his purported withdrawal in June 2000. But as we discussed above, Dunn never legally withdrew. He stopped selling Aegis trusts in June 2000 at the request of his employer, the financial services firm SunAmerica, but he continued to service existing clients. At the same time, he never took steps to renounce the aims of the conspiracy.
Dunn promoted and sold Aegis trusts, but that was not the extent of his involvement in the Aegis scheme. He also gave instructions to tax preparers as to how tax returns should be prepared in light of the Aegis trusts. He was one of the plaintiffs in the frivolous lawsuit filed against the ARDC. He participated, as we have noted, in Aegis policy meetings. As the district court noted, Dunn, in contrast to Bartoli, Vallone, and Hopper, already had successful employment with SunAmerica when he became involved with Aegis and so, arguably, should not have been as susceptible to a lucrative fraud. Like other defendants, Dunn used the Aegis system to dramatically under-report his taxable income: he reported income of only $16,000 in 1997 and $9,000 in 1998, for example, when his actual income in those years was roughly $400,000 and $600,000, respectively. R. 1086 at 28; Gov't Ex. Dunn Income Summary (Gov't Supp. App. 151). There were mitigating factors which the district court noted and considered, including Dunn's financially difficult childhood, putting himself through school, caring for his mother until her death (Judge Norgle characterized Dunn as "an extremely good son," R. 1086 at 32), and his readiness to help others. Yet, as the court noted, Dunn's involvement in this extensive crime was anything but a one-time, impulsive act.
Dunn repeats and expands upon an argument that the defendants made jointly: that the district court improperly treated notice of the trusts' illegality received by one defendant as notice to the conspiracy and thus notice to all of the conspiracy's members. Dunn contends that the court's erroneous ruling relieved the government of the burden to show that Dunn himself realized that the Aegis trusts were a sham and yet participated in the conspiracy and marketed the trusts to clients with that knowledge, and with the intent to defraud the government and/or violate the tax laws. In effect, Dunn posits, the court eliminated an element of the government's burden of proof and simultaneously eliminated the presumption of innocence as to that element, forcing Dunn to offer proof (e.g., by cross-examining government's witnesses) that he did not knowingly become a party to an unlawful agreement. His conviction on the conspiracy charge, Dunn maintains, was obtained in violation of his Fifth Amendment, right to due process and his Sixth Amendment right to a jury finding as to his guilt or innocence.
Our prior discussion of the defendants' joint argument on this point disposes of Dunn's individual claim. So far as we can determine, the district court voiced its notice-to-the-conspiracy rationale solely to counsel at sidebar in the context of admitting certain evidence: neither Dunn nor the defendants collectively have been able to point to any instance in which this rationale was communicated to the jury. Consequently, the jury was never erroneously informed, whether by way of a formal instruction or otherwise, that it could presume Dunn's knowledge of the illegality of the Aegis scheme based on evidence that Bartoli or Vallone knew that the Aegis trusts were a sham, for example. And although Dunn suggests that the court's ruling relieved the government of the burden to show that Dunn became a party to the conspiracy with knowledge that the Aegis system was unlawful, there is no evidence that the government itself ever argued to the jury that simply because another defendant had notice of the illegality that Dunn necessarily did as well. Instead, as it did with each of the six defendants, the government made a case that Dunn himself knew, based on the facts surrounding the trusts and on the notice that he individually received, that the trusts were a sham and that he was acting with an intent to defraud the government and to violate the federal income tax laws. R. 923 Tr. 6808-24; R. 911 Tr. 6827-71. Whatever possible misconceptions the district court may have held and communicated to counsel, the jury was properly instructed on the law (e.g., to give separate consideration both to each count and to each defendant, R. 925 Tr. 7389) and on the government's burden of proof, and Dunn was not deprived of his Fifth or Sixth Amendment rights.
Dunn contends that the district court abused its discretion in denying him a separate trial. Like Dowd, Dunn sought to sever his own trial from that of his co-defendants. R. 391. Dunn's theory was that his defense was antagonistic to his co-defendants in the sense that he was an outsider vis-à-vis Aegis (in that he was an outside salesperson rather than an employee or officer of Aegis), did not truly believe
However, as we noted earlier with respect to Dowd, the failure of Dunn's counsel to renew the motion to sever at the close of evidence resulted in a waiver of this issue that renders the district court's ruling unreviewable. United States v. Phillips, supra, 239 F.3d at 837-40. Dunn has made no attempt to show that it would have been futile for him to renew his motion and his arguments in support thereof at the close of evidence. In any case, for the reasons we have already discussed, the district court's notice-to-one/notice-to-the-conspiracy rationale, which is the principal if not sole basis on which Dunn argues that the joint trial worked to his substantial prejudice, did not in fact deprive Dunn or any other defendant of a fair trial.
Finally, Dunn contends that the evidence was insufficient to establish his guilt on the charges that he aided, counseled, or otherwise encouraged the preparation of false or fraudulent income tax returns in violation of section 7206(2). Much like Hopper's challenge on this point, Dunn's appeal presumes that the government was required to show that he had some kind of personal involvement in the preparation of the fraudulent tax returns in order for him to be held liable under section 7206(2). Dunn concedes that there was a videotape of him remarking at an Aegis seminar that he had to give direction to tax preparers, but he contends that this has been taken out of context. He emphasizes the lack of any evidence as to what he might have said to any tax preparer, for example. No such tax preparer ever testified; and, for that matter, no Aegis client whose false returns Dunn was found guilty of aiding or assisting ever testified that Dunn was involved in the preparation of those returns. In short, the jury could only speculate as to what role he may have played in the preparation of any tax return other than his own, and in Dunn's view the evidence thus was insufficient to support his convictions under section 7206(2).
That Dunn did not prepare any of the charged tax returns himself does not preclude his convictions under section 7206(2). United States v. Hooks, supra,
The filing of false tax returns was, as the government argues, the "essence" of the tax-avoidance scheme that Dunn and the other defendants perpetrated. The Aegis trusts were marketed to clients as a means through which they could substantially reduce, if not eliminate, their individual income tax liability. The filing of federal income tax returns purporting to accomplish that end was thus the natural, inevitable, and entirely foreseeable result of what Dunn and his coconspirators were doing. Dunn, as a promoter of the Aegis system, regularly spoke with prospective clients about the sorts of deductions they would be able to take on their tax returns by making use of the Aegis trusts and the significantly reduced taxes they would pay as a result. To cite one example, Dunn client David Vermeulen testified that in the fall of 1995, Dunn had told him that he would "pay a lot less in taxes" by using the Aegis system and could use the tax savings to buy a motorcycle, boat, or other "toy[]." R. 915 Tr. 2472. Dunn also boasted to Agent Priess, who posed as prospective client Mike Jordan, that another client had saved $300,000 in taxes in just one year by using the offshore version of the Aegis system. R. 965 Tr. 289-90. In other (covertly recorded) conversations, Dunn and Priess discussed the types of deductions that Priess might take on his tax returns, how much income Priess should report as salary on his individual returns, how he might make use of a charitable trust, and other issues related to the tax returns that Priess would be filing once he began using the Aegis system. R. 943 Tr. 221-23; R. 965 Tr. 338-39. The sorts of conversations that Dunn had with Priess were typical of the interactions that
Dunn also addressed similar topics at the Aegis promotion seminars in which he participated. An excerpt from one videotaped seminar was played for the jury at trial. After speaking at length about how an Aegis client's tax return would look after taking various deductions, exemptions, and so forth, Dunn concluded: "So how much tax do we pay once we're set up in this fashion[?] How much tax do you wanna pay? (Audience laughter.)" R. 914 Tr. 2315-16; Gov't Ex. Coleman Tr. 17 (Gov't Supp. App. 101). Evidence along these lines is more than sufficient to support a finding that Dunn, in marketing and managing Aegis trusts, not only envisioned but promoted the fraudulent tax returns that Aegis clients ultimately filed based on those trusts. The fact that Dunn had the descriptor "Tax Engineering Services" printed on his Aegis Management Company letterhead, R. 965 Tr. 285; Gov't Ex. Priess 6, is just one more indication that he knew full well that what he was providing to Aegis clients was a means of reducing their tax liability.
In addition to the foregoing evidence, there was additional evidence that the defendants — including Dunn — had at least some involvement in the preparation of tax returns for Aegis clients. Recall that Aegis required its clients to use a tax preparer pre-cleared by Aegis for at least one year following their purchase of an Aegis package. R. 965 Tr. 283; R. 944 Tr. 423; R. 918 Tr. 4312; R. 921 Tr. 5428-29. One could infer from that requirement that the defendants were interested in making sure that tax returns would be prepared by preparers who were, shall we say, sympathetic to the Aegis philosophy. Beyond that, there was evidence that Dunn, among other defendants, regularly gave advice to tax preparers and accountants as to how a client's income and expenses should be treated on tax returns. Dunn himself remarked at a May 1997 seminar that "because many accounting people are unfamiliar with the process, we are getting to a point where we almost have to become CPAs in addition to attorneys to be able to teach them how to do the accounting work." R. 914 Tr. 2315; Gov't Ex. Coleman Tr. 16 (Gov't Supp. App. 100). Dunn urges us not to put too much weight on that particular remark. But even if we discard the inference that Dunn himself was one of the individuals advising others as to the way in which tax returns should be prepared, Dunn's remark at the seminar, much like his recorded remarks to Priess about the deductions Priess would be able to take, demonstrates Dunn's awareness that his own actions in promoting and managing Aegis trusts would lead directly to the preparation and filing of tax returns that reflected what he was saying and doing in furtherance of the charged conspiracy. Just as in Fletcher, the jury could reasonably find, based on the steps that Dunn took to promote, sell, and manage Aegis trusts, that Dunn willfully aided in, assisted, procured, counseled, or advised the preparation of the false or fraudulent tax returns filed by the clients he recruited and served.
Dunn contends that as to six of the false tax return counts in which he was charged, venue was not proper in the Northern District of Illinois. Generally speaking, a defendant is to be tried in the district where the alleged offense was committed. U.S. Const. art. III, § 2, cl. 3; Fed. R.Crim.P. 18. But an offense that involves multiple steps or continues over a period of time may occur in multiple districts.
Viewing the record in the light most favorable to the government, e.g., United States v. Ochoa, 229 F.3d 631, 636 (7th Cir.2000), We are satisfied that a preponderance of the evidence, see id., confirms the propriety of venue in the Northern District of Illinois as to each of the counts in question. Counts 24 through 26 of the indictment were based on the 1997-1999 tax returns filed for Bruce and Tammy Groen, who were clients of Dunn. Although, as Dunn reminds us, the Groens themselves did not testify, the evidence admitted at trial showed that all three returns were prepared and signed by CPA Laura Baxter, as evidenced not only by the returns themselves but also the recovery of many documents related to those returns from Baxter's office files, and Baxter's office was located in Frankfort, Illinois — a municipality within the Northern District of Illinois. The evidence thus readily supported the inference that all three returns were prepared and subscribed to by their preparer in the Northern District of Illinois. Counts 33 and 34 were based on the 1997 and 1998 tax returns filed for Dunn clients John and Colleen McNinney. Like the Groens' returns, these returns were prepared and signed by Baxter, as evidenced by the returns themselves as well as documentation recovered from Baxter's office in the Northern District of Illinois. Finally, Counts 46 and 47 were based on Dunn's own returns for 1997 and 1998. Those returns were prepared and signed by CPA Robert Clausing, as evidenced by his signature on the returns as well as extensive documentation recovered from his office. Clausing's office was in Lansing, Illinois — again, within the Northern District. The evidence was thus more than sufficient to establish that each of these counts was based on acts which took place within the Northern District of Illinois. Venue was therefore proper in that district.
Bartoli contends that the district court erred in refusing to appoint a defense expert to assess his competency to stand trial and to conduct a proper competency hearing before commencing with the trial. Although Bartoli was examined by an expert agreed to by both Bartoli and the government, and that expert concluded that Bartoli was competent, Bartoli suggests that the court breached an earlier promise to appoint a defense expert and, in any case, should have conducted an evidentiary hearing before declaring him competent to stand trial.
Bartoli's counsel first sought a competency assessment pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 4241(a) in December 2007. Counsel had became concerned that Bartoli, then seventy-eight years old, was exhibiting poor memory and irrational beliefs about the Tax Code. He then learned that Bartoli had been preliminarily diagnosed with vascular dementia or early-stage Alzheimer's Disease. R. 321. The court granted the request for an evaluation, but, in the exercise of its authority under 18 U.S.C.
On learning that Goldstein's report would deem Bartoli fit for trial, Bartoli's counsel filed a motion requesting the appointment of two physicians so that a second assessment could be performed. R. 412. The motion also requested a continuance of the trial date (February 19, 2008), to accommodate both the additional assessment and, in the event that assessment reached a different conclusion than the first, a competency hearing before the court. The court denied the request. R. 416. At the hearing on the motion, the court observed preliminarily that Goldstein had been selected "by agreement of counsel and as an alternative or as a compromise to having Mr. Bartoli go to the Bureau of Prisons." R. 1051 at 69. The court then proceeded to independently consider whether a second evaluation was warranted and should be ordered in the exercise of its discretion. See United States v. Andrews, 469 F.3d 1113, 1121 (7th Cir.2006). The court remarked that Goldstein's report was comprehensive, "one of best I have seen in a long time." R. 1051 at 74; see also id. at 69, 72, 73. It noted that Goldstein's assessment was based on a substantial series of tests, and that much of the material she had considered in evaluating Bartoli's competency had been provided by Bartoli's counsel. Bartoli's counsel himself conceded that Goldstein's examination of his client "was comprehensive and thorough." Id. at 77. Under these circumstances, the court saw no need for a second evaluation:
R. 1051 at 77. Subsequently, at the start of the trial, the court expressly found Bartoli competent to stand trial, taking into consideration Dr. Goldstein's report as well as everything that had been presented by Bartoli's counsel. R. 988 Tr. 7.
The decision whether or not to order a competency examination is one that we review for abuse of discretion, see Andrews, 469 F.3d at 1121, and the court in this instance did not abuse its discretion by refusing the appointment of additional physicians for purposes of a second assessment. The premise for Bartoli's contention that the court was obliged to order a second evaluation is not that there was some deficiency in Dr. Goldstein's evaluation, which Bartoli's lawyer agreed was thorough and comprehensive, but rather that the court had originally committed to the appointment of a second expert and examination in the event that the first expert found Bartoli competent. But the court made that commitment in the context of ordering that Bartoli first be examined by an expert of the government's choosing at a BOP facility. The context changed significantly when, for purposes of resolving Bartoli's appeal of the court's order, the parties agreed that Bartoli would be examined by an expert — Dr. Goldstein — acceptable to both of them. Thus, the district court's understanding — one that we share — was that Dr. Goldstein was not the government's expert, but an independent expert submitted to by agreement. Because Dr. Goldstein was appointed by agreement of the parties, fairness no longer dictated that a second expert be permitted as a matter of course in the event that Bartoli was dissatisfied with the results of the first examination. Once Dr. Goldstein concluded that Bartoli was competent, the pertinent question vis-à-vis the need for a second expert was whether there was some reason to question the soundness of Dr. Goldstein's examination and conclusion. No such deficiency was cited to the district court and none has been cited to us. In this context, the district court reasonably concluded that a second evaluation was not necessary.
Bartoli also faults the court for not conducting an evidentiary hearing before finding him competent, but again we find no abuse of discretion in the court's decision to determine his competency without a hearing. A hearing is required when there is reasonable cause to believe that the defendant may be suffering from a mental disease or defect that renders him unable to understand the nature or consequences of the proceedings against him or to properly assist in his defense. § 4241(a); see United States v. Grimes, 173 F.3d 634, 635-36 (7th Cir.1999) (coll. cases); United States v. Graves, 98 F.3d 258, 261-62 (7th Cir.1996) (evidentiary hearing becomes mandatory if, on preliminary inquiry, reasonable cause to believe defendant may be incompetent persists). Certainly, based on the preliminary diagnosis of Bartoli's physician coupled with the concerns that Bartoli's counsel articulated, there was cause to order an examination of Bartoli. But once a thorough evaluation had been undertaken by an independent expert, and
Bartoli and the other defendants were indicted in 2004, seven and one-half years after Bartoli retired as Aegis's in-house counsel in 1996 and moved to Myrtle Beach, South Carolina. Given his retirement, Bartoli contends that the governing statutes of limitations — the longest of which is six years — preclude all of the charges against him. Of course, the Aegis scheme continued into 2002, many years after Bartoli's retirement as Aegis's counsel; and each of the acts underlying the charges of mail, wire, and tax fraud all occurred within the relevant limitations period. But, in essence, Bartoli's theory is that his relocation marked his withdrawal from the Aegis scheme and thus caused the limitations clock to start running much sooner for him than it did for his codefendants. Notwithstanding his retirement, Bartoli remained a director and part owner of Aegis, and he continued to receive distributions of profits from its operations until 2002. But he reasons that he was not sufficiently involved in the operations of Aegis after 1996 to render him liable for any acts of the charged conspiracy — including the acts of mail fraud, wire fraud, and aiding in the preparation of false or fraudulent tax returns — which took place after his retirement and relocation. He notes, for example, that he had no hand in preparing any of the tax returns underlying the charges filed under section 7206(2); in his view, the sole connection he had with those returns was that he came up with the concept of using the business trust as a tax avoidance vehicle five or six years before those returns were filed. He adds that, at the time of his retirement, it was still entirely plausible to view the Aegis system as a lawful and legitimate means of tax reduction. Thus, to the extent it was foreseeable to Bartoli in 1996 that Aegis clients would be filing income tax returns in subsequent years based on the Aegis trusts, he insists that it was not foreseeable to him that those returns would be deemed fraudulent. As he sees things, only after his 1996 retirement did the clues as to the illegality of the system begin to emerge. The IRS did not issue Notice 97-24 until April 1997, for example, and the Tax Court did not issue its decision in Muhich (concerning the legitimacy of an Aegis-like trust system that Bartoli had established) until 1999. And given how minimal Bartoli's involvement with Aegis purportedly was after 1996, he believes he cannot be held liable on charges that were filed more than seven years after he retired from Aegis. (He also notes, parenthetically, that changes were made in the Aegis trust documents and systems subsequent to his retirement.)
Plainly, Bartoli's statute-of-limitations claim hinges on the notion that he legally withdrew from the alleged conspiracy (and any effort to defraud the government of its tax income) in 1996. A defendant's withdrawal from a conspiracy does not, in itself, absolve him of criminal liability
As we have discussed, simply stopping one's active participation in a conspiracy does not constitute a legally meaningful withdrawal from that conspiracy. E.g., United States v. Julian, supra, 427 F.3d at 483.
United States v. Patel, 879 F.2d 292, 294 (7th Cir.1989) (quoting United States v. Borelli, 336 F.2d 376, 388 (2d Cir.1964) (Friendly, J.)); see also United States v. Schiro, 679 F.3d 521, 528-29 (7th Cir. 2012), petition for cert. filed (U.S. July 30, 2012) (No. 12-5571); United States v. Paladino, 401 F.3d 471, 479-80 (7th Cir. 2005); United States v. Wilson, supra, 134 F.3d at 863. In order to effectuate a genuine withdrawal from a conspiracy, a defendant must "terminate completely his active involvement in the conspiracy, as well as take affirmative steps to defeat or disavow the conspiracy's purpose." United States v. Hargrove, 508 F.3d 445, 449 (7th Cir.2007) (emphasis supplied). By his own admission, Bartoli did not completely end his active involvement with Aegis, let alone take affirmative steps to defeat or disavow use of the Aegis trusts. His retirement and relocation to South Carolina may have signaled a reduced role in the day-to-day operations of Aegis (he no longer signed trust documents as he had before, for example), but it did not constitute a withdrawal from the charged conspiracy. See id. at 449 ("That [defendant] retired in March 2000 and moved to Las Vegas does not by itself mean he withdrew from the conspiracy.")
On the contrary, there is significant evidence, some of which Bartoli himself cites, that he remained involved with Aegis, and took steps in furtherance of the charged conspiracy, long after his 1996 retirement as Aegis's counsel. He still participated in Aegis seminars, which pitched the Aegis trust system to prospective clients, as late as May 1997. R. 954 Tr. 5463-64. Vallone and Bartoli consulted regularly about various issues related to Aegis, and this continued through 2001 and 2002. R. 910 Tr. 6226-27. Bartoli participated in Aegis management meetings in the summer and fall of 1999, R. 913 Tr. 1952-54; he tried to keep the peace between Vallone and Hopper after their falling out over what they should advise clients in the wake of the Muhich decision, R. 913 Tr. 1958; R. 947 Tr. 2122; and on November 12, 1999, he signed the resolution indicating that he, Vallone, and Hopper shared equal management
Bartoli thus did not withdraw from the conspiracy in a way that might support his statute of limitations argument and preclude his liability for the acts of his coconspirators. The government has a point when it likens Bartoli to the man walking away from the ticking bomb that we referred to in Patel. Bartoli, after all, was the one who pitched the idea of the business trusts to his fellow defendants; in a May 15, 2001, email, he reminded Vallone that he (Bartoli) was "the old fart who started it all" and that he "want[ed] Dustin Hoffman to play [his] part in the movie." R. 971 Tr. 4356-57. In fact, however, Bartoli never walked away from Aegis. He remained involved in the company and in the efforts to defraud the government, and continued to profit, as late as 2002. We remarked earlier with respect to Hopper that it was clear from the start that the trust system that Bartoli devised did not comply with certain fundamental principles of trust and taxation law. Those principles did not change over time. But whatever Bartoli's professed belief as to the legality of the Aegis trust system may have been at the time of his retirement as counsel to the firm, he continued his involvement well after he and the other defendants had direct and specific notice that the government regarded the system as an unlawful means of tax evasion.
The jury was instructed on the concept of withdrawal pursuant to an instruction proposed by defendant Hopper and joined by Bartoli. R. 936 Tr. 6018; R. 925 Tr. 7381-82. There was little evidence to support the withdrawal defense and much evidence supporting the jury's decision to reject it. The district court did not err in denying Bartoli's motion for a judgment of acquittal insofar as it was based on the notion that his claimed withdrawal from the conspiracy caused the statutes of limitations to run on the charges against him.
We note finally that to the extent Bartoli, like Hopper and Dunn, contends that he had no involvement with, and thus cannot be held liable for, the preparation of the false or fraudulent tax returns filed by Aegis clients, his contention fails for the same reasons. See supra at 492-93, 505-07; United States v. Hooks, supra, 848 F.2d at 791.
Finally, Bartoli contends that the district court erred in allowing evidence and argument as to the disbarment proceedings against him. Bartoli notes that these proceedings were offered to establish his notice of the illegality of the Aegis trust system, but the final order of disbarment was not issued until May 2002, more than two years after the March 2000 IRS raid on Aegis offices that signaled the beginning
As with the defendants' joint challenge, we find no abuse of discretion by the district court in admitting this evidence as to Bartoli. Bartoli himself was the respondent in the ARDC proceedings, and there is no dispute that he was aware of the proceedings. The charges themselves would have alerted Bartoli to the suspect nature of the Aegis trusts. Moreover, although he was not present to hear the evidence presented to the Hearing Board, he was represented by counsel during the proceeding. A jury could reasonably infer that his counsel would have apprised him of the testimony, including that of Marutzky. Alternatively, or additionally, a jury might infer that Bartoli's ignorance of what occurred during the ARDC proceedings, given his status as the respondent, represented a willful blindness to the illegality of the Aegis system. Moreover, there was evidence that Bartoli, like other defendants, remained active in the conspiracy as late as 2002, so the fact that the opinion of the ARDC's Hearing Board did not issue until February 16, 2000, does not undermine its relevance as notice evidence. (The government did not, in fact, introduce or rely upon the final disbarment order issued in May 2002.)
Bartoli points out that although the government agreed to redact all references to disbarment from its evidence concerning the ARDC proceedings, Dunn's counsel nonetheless characterized the proceedings as disbarment proceedings twice during his opening statement. R. 942 Tr. 128. However, the court instructed the jury to disregard those references, R. 942 Tr. 136, and given the overwhelming evidence of Bartoli's guilt, we believe it highly unlikely that those references had any impact on the jury's assessment of the evidence.
For all of the reasons we have discussed, we AFFIRM the defendants' convictions and sentences.