United States v. Mangone ( 1997 )


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  • USCA1 Opinion








    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    ____________________


    No. 95-2102

    UNITED STATES,

    Appellee,

    v.

    RICHARD D. MANGONE,

    Defendant, Appellant.


    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. William G. Young, U.S. District Judge] ___________________
    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella, Chief Judge, ___________

    Bownes, Senior Circuit Judge, ____________________

    and Stahl, Circuit Judge. _____________

    ____________________

    Bruce Green for appellant. ___________
    Paul G. Levenson, Assistant United States Attorney, with whom _________________
    Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, and Victor A. Wild, Assistant _______________ ______________
    United States Attorney, were on brief for appellee.

    ____________________

    January 28, 1997
    ____________________





















    BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. Defendant Richard D. BOWNES, Senior Circuit Judge. ____________________

    Mangone was convicted after a lengthy jury trial on counts of

    conspiracy, bank fraud, unlawful receipt of monies by a

    credit union officer, and money laundering. He appeals both

    his conviction and the district court's decision to depart

    upward from the applicable Sentencing Guidelines range.

    I I
    Facts Facts _____

    In order to understand the issues properly, a

    thorough recitation of the scope of defendant's criminal

    conduct is required. We relate the facts in the light most

    favorable to the verdict. See United States v. Wihbey, 75 ___ ________________________

    F.3d 761, 764 (1st Cir. 1996). Between December 1985 and

    March 1991, defendant conspired with James Smith, Robert

    Cohen, and Ambrose Devaney to defraud two separate lending

    institutions, the Barnstable Community Federal Credit Union

    ("BCCU") and the Digital Employees Federal Credit Union

    ("Digital"). Defendant, president of Digital and a founder

    of BCCU, and Smith, a real estate developer and a founder of

    BCCU, were the primary organizers of the fraud. Robert Cohen

    was general counsel to both credit unions. Ambrose Devaney

    was a real estate developer on Cape Cod. This court's

    affirmance of the convictions and sentences of Smith, Cohen

    and Devaney is found at United States v. Smith, 46 F.3d 1223 ______________________

    (1st Cir.), cert. denied, 116 S. Ct. 176 (1995). ____ ______




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    Defendant and Smith used their control over the two

    credit unions to obtain tens of millions of dollars in loans

    for their own speculative real estate ventures. The loans

    were used in part to finance the purchase of commercial real

    estate on Cape Cod, usually motel properties or raw land for

    residential subdivisions. The loans were, in many instances,

    funded in amounts far in excess of the purchase price of the

    property, with much of the excess going directly into the

    pockets of defendant, Smith, and Devaney. In order to avoid

    the credit union's policies restricting "insider" loans as

    well as policies limiting maximum borrowing by an individual,

    the conspirators formed over a dozen nominee trusts to create

    the fiction that the loans were going to many different

    borrowers. As president of Digital, which had experienced

    explosive growth since its founding in 1980, defendant

    enjoyed the confidence of that credit union's board of

    directors and staff. Defendant was therefore able to induce

    Digital to allocate approximately $20,000,000 for

    "investment" in participation loans with BCCU, without

    disclosing the fact that defendant himself was one of the

    ultimate borrowers of those funds. All of the participation

    loans were made to trusts owned by defendant and Smith (and

    in most cases Devaney). In each instance, the participation

    loans were funded in amounts far in excess of the actual

    purchase price of the commercial property. These excess



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    funds, known as "pie," were siphoned off and diverted to

    accounts controlled by defendant or Smith for further

    distribution. The amount of "pie" varied but was generally

    between $75,000 and $200,000 per partner per loan.

    For all of the participation loans and for many

    additional loans, defendant and his co-conspirators concealed

    their ownership interests by placing in BCCU's and Digital's

    files phony certificates of beneficial interest, falsely

    naming certain individuals as beneficiaries of the trusts.

    In order to obtain loans well in excess of the purchase price

    of the property, defendant and Smith forged and altered

    purchase and sale agreements, often inflating prices by over

    one million dollars. For most of the participation loans,

    defendant, Smith, and Lynn Vasapolle, an unindicted co-

    conspirator, prepared fake financial statements to create the

    false impression that the putative borrowers (the "trustees")

    were wealthy individuals capable of repaying the loans being

    extended.

    Most of the participation loans were initially

    closed between December 1985 and October 1988, and were made

    with "interest only" notes for relatively short terms (1-2

    years), with a balloon payment of the full principal due upon

    expiration. When they were unable to find legitimate buyers

    to whom they could sell the properties at a profit sufficient

    to cover both the original purchase price and the excess



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    "pie" they had received, the conspirators began to pyramid

    their loans.

    Beginning in 1986, as loans came due on subdivision

    properties, Cohen would draw up papers "selling" a portion of

    the original subdivision to a newly created trust. Defendant

    and Smith would then cause BCCU to make a loan to the new

    trust to finance the purchase. The new loan proceeds would

    then be used to pay off the proportionate share of the prior

    loan. Purchase "prices" were again artificially inflated so

    as to provide cash which was used to cover interest payments

    on the new loans and to help with debt service on the

    existing loans. By March 1991, when BCCU was seized by the

    National Credit Union Administration, the outstanding balance

    of the Mangone-Smith-Devaney loans amounted to between forty

    and sixty million dollars.

    On September 12, 1992, defendant, Smith, Cohen, and

    Devaney were indicted for conspiracy (18 U.S.C. 371) to

    commit bank fraud (18 U.S.C. 1344); unlawful receipt of

    monies by a credit union officer (18 U.S.C. 1006); and

    money laundering (18 U.S.C. 1957). The case was tried on a

    redacted indictment that included a conspiracy count, seven

    bank fraud counts, seven parallel unlawful receipt counts

    (which concerned defendant alone) and the money laundering







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    charges. Defendant was convicted on all counts.1 Defendant

    fled prior to sentencing and remained at large for eighteen

    months before he surrendered. On September 12, 1995,

    defendant was sentenced to twenty-four years of incarceration

    after the district court departed upward by two years from

    the maximum sentence under the Guidelines.

    II II
    The Bruton Error The Bruton Error ________________

    Defendant appeals his conviction on the basis of

    alleged error under Bruton v. United States, 391 U.S. 123 _________________________

    (1968). This issue has already been decided against

    defendant's co-conspirator Smith, who asserted a factually

    identical claim of Bruton error in his appeal, which we found ______

    to have been harmless error. Smith, 46 F.3d at 1229-30. _____

    Although we could dispose of defendant's claim on the ground

    of stare decisis, we provide a brief analysis. _____ _______

    The Supreme Court held in Bruton that, because of ______

    the substantial risk that the jury, despite instructions to

    the contrary, will look to a codefendant's incriminating

    extrajudicial statement in determining the defendant's guilt,

    admission of a codefendant's statement in a joint trial

    violates the defendant's right of cross-examination under the


    ____________________

    1. Smith was also convicted on all counts. Cohen was
    convicted on all counts except for four money laundering
    charges. Devaney was convicted of conspiracy, three counts
    of bank fraud and one count of money laundering. Smith, 46 _____
    F.3d at 1227.

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    Confrontation Clause of the Sixth Amendment. Bruton, 391 ______

    U.S. at 126. The evidentiary basis for the Bruton claim is ______

    as follows.

    On the last day of trial testimony, co-defendant

    Cohen called to the stand Professor Richard Huber, an

    authority on the professional responsibilities of attorneys.

    Testifying under the district court's limiting instruction

    that the testimony was relevant as to Cohen only, and had

    nothing to do with any of Cohen's co-defendants, Professor

    Huber reiterated the events of April 4, 1991, when Cohen met

    with him to obtain advice concerning his representation of

    BCCU, which by that time was in the hands of federal

    regulators. Huber testified that Cohen explained to him that

    Cohen's clients, "a former officer of the bank, a former

    director of the bank, and a bank manager came in and spoke to

    [Cohen] . . . concerning activities that involved them and

    their work at the bank." Smith, 46 F.3d at 1228. According _____

    to Huber, Cohen stated that "certain documents had been

    changed, the information had been changed, figures had been

    changed, data had been changed, [and] that this had been done

    after preparation by Mr. Cohen and after they had been

    presumptively completed." Id. ___

    Like Smith before him, defendant asserts that

    Huber's testimony constitutes reversible Bruton error because ______

    it "expressly implicate[s] the defendant, leaving no doubt



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    that it would prove powerfully incriminating." Id. (internal ___

    quotation marks and citations omitted)(alteration in

    original). In Smith, we assumed without deciding that the _____

    admission of Huber's testimony constituted Bruton error, but ______

    held that any such error was harmless beyond a reasonable

    doubt. 46 F.3d at 1229.

    Relying on Chapman v. California, 386 U.S. 18 ______________________

    (1967), and related cases, defendant argues strenuously that

    the error was not harmless. We disagree. We remain

    convinced that any Bruton error that may have occurred below2 ______

    was harmless for the reasons stated in Smith: _____

    The jury convicted all the defendants on
    the conspiracy count, and Cohen on most
    of the substantive counts. Even if the
    jury threw the curative instructions to
    the wind and considered the stricken
    testimony as evidence against [Mangone],3
    the scenario which implicates Bruton, it ______
    could not have believed Cohen's claim
    that the unnamed clients confessed to him _________
    at the close of the conspiracy. No one
    confesses to a partner in crime.

    Admittedly, Cohen's statement might
    tend to incriminate [Mangone] and Devaney
    by showing that the coconspirators met to
    discuss damage control. In this sense,
    however, the statement falls far outside
    the pale of the "powerfully
    incriminating" evidence that produces
    Bruton errors. Vasapolle had already ______
    testified in detail to the

    ____________________

    2. As we did in Smith, we "assume without deciding that the _____
    district court correctly found that Bruton error had ______
    occurred." Smith, 46 F.3d at 1229. _____

    3. The name "Mangone" has been substituted for "Smith."

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    coconspirators' meetings in the wake of
    the BCCU takeover. Thus, once Cohen's
    statement is considered as something
    other than an account of the
    codefendants' confessions, it becomes
    merely cumulative of the government's
    case and could not have produced Bruton ______
    error.

    The right of confrontation ensures
    that a criminal defendant can cross-
    examine his or her accusers. Had Cohen
    testified to the confession himself,
    [Mangone's] cross-examination of Cohen
    would have sought to show that no
    confession ever occurred. The verdicts
    suggest that the jury, if it considered
    this evidence, found just that. The
    jury, even if it disregarded the limiting
    instructions, plainly did not believe
    Cohen's claim that his codefendants had
    confessed to him. It is clear,
    therefore, that any Bruton error was ______
    harmless beyond a reasonable doubt.

    46 F.3d at 1229-30 (footnote and citations omitted). Because

    there is no difference between defendant's claim of Bruton ______

    error and the Bruton error asserted by Smith in his appeal, ______

    we follow the holding of Smith and affirm defendant's _____

    c o n v i c t i o n .

    III III
    The Sentencing Appeal The Sentencing Appeal _____________________

    At sentencing, the district court departed upward

    by two years from the maximum sentence allowed under the

    Sentencing Guidelines. Defendant appeals this departure on

    two grounds: (1) that the district court failed to provide

    him with notice of its planned departure, as required under

    Federal Rule of Criminal Procedure 32, as interpreted in



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    Burns v. United States, 501 U.S. 129 (1991); and (2) that the ______________________

    upward departure was impermissible as a matter of law. We

    begin our analysis with a recitation of the district court's

    procedure at sentencing.

    Indicating that it was following its "usual

    procedure," the district court stated that it would "go

    through mathematically the requirements of the Sentencing

    Guidelines, and if anyone, government or defense, disagrees

    with the numbers as I state them . . . we will then discuss

    and resolve the differences right at that time." After

    having verified that the defendant had read and understood

    the Presentence Report (PSR), the district court proceeded to

    calculate the applicable Guidelines sentence, assisted

    throughout by both the government and defense counsel. The

    district court scrupulously determined the applicability of

    each guideline and made certain that both government and

    defense agreed on the accuracy of the court's calculations.

    The court then turned to the question of departure

    from the Guidelines, inviting argument from both government

    and defense. The government urged an upward departure of two

    years on the basis of defendant's eighteen-month flight from

    justice. Defense counsel argued against departing upward on

    the basis of flight, suggesting that modest credit should be

    given to defendant for surrendering, and that consideration

    should be given to defendant's age in weighing departure



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    upward from an already lengthy sentence. The district court

    then provided defendant with an opportunity to address the

    court, during which defendant expressed remorse for his

    actions. The district court then announced the sentence:

    [T]his court sentences you to a total of
    24 years in the custody of the United
    States Attorney General . . . .

    The total sentence of 24 years
    exceeds the maximum on the various counts
    of which you stand convicted. And,
    therefore, it's appropriate to explain
    the manner in which the sentence will be
    calculated and the counts on which it
    will be calculated.

    . . . .

    I depart upward not on the ground
    that the government has adverted to; I do
    not punish you for a crime, though you
    admit it here, for which you have never
    been indicted, and never been brought
    before a jury and never had the process
    of law. I depart upward solely because,
    in my judgment, having presided over this
    case, the egregiousness, evilness of your
    conduct, on each of the criteria
    considered by the Sentencing Guidelines
    taken in their entirety, takes you out of
    the heartland of the guidelines.

    I adopt the argument that, in
    effect, you max out under the guidelines
    at a sentence that undervalues the actual
    criminality of your conduct if it is an
    appropriate goal of the criminal justice
    system to punish.

    . . . .

    Mr. Mangone, you've ruined people's
    lives; lots of lives, people you don't
    even know. Being sorry to these various
    financial institutions isn't the half of
    it. That's the sentence of the Court.


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    At the same time I'm not insensitive to
    the Draconian nature of this sentence. I
    believe it's appropriate in the
    circumstances and I arrive at it only
    after most careful reflection. That's
    the sentence of the Court.

    Notice Notice ______

    The PSR contains no information which could be

    construed to provide notice to the defendant that the court

    was contemplating an upward departure based upon this

    particular ground. In fact, when the district court asked

    the government about the possibility that the Guidelines

    sentence undervalued defendant's criminality, the government

    expressly stated that "the guidelines adequately address the

    enormity of the offense here."

    In Burns the precise question was whether Fed. R. _____

    Crim. P. 32(a)(1), now 32(c)(1), required the sentencing

    court to give notice to the parties of its intent to make sua ___

    sponte departures from the Guidelines. Subdivision (c)(1) of ______

    Rule 32 does not contain a specific notice provision but

    requires the district court to afford the parties "'an

    opportunity to comment upon . . . matters relating to the

    appropriate sentence' at the sentencing hearing." Burns, 501 _____

    U.S. at 132. The Court observed, "In our view, it makes no

    sense to impute to Congress an intent that a defendant have

    the right to comment on the appropriateness of a sua sponte __ _______ ___ ______

    departure but not the right to be notified that the court is __ __ ________




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    contemplating such a ruling." Id. at 135-36. The Court held ___

    that

    before a district court can depart upward
    on a ground not identified as a ground
    for upward departure either in the
    presentence report or in a prehearing
    submission by the Government, Rule 32
    requires that the district court give the
    parties reasonable notice that it is
    contemplating such a ruling. This notice
    must specifically identify the ground on
    which the district court is contemplating
    an upward departure.

    Id. at 138-39 (footnote omitted). The Burns rule has been ___ _____

    incorporated into an application note to 6A1.2 of the

    Guidelines.

    Defendant challenges the district court's departure

    on the basis that he was not provided with notice of the

    court's intention to depart upward. Because the defendant

    failed to object to the lack of notice at the sentencing

    hearing, we review the district court's actions under the

    rigorous standard of "plain error" review. See United States ___ _____________

    v. Jones, 1 F.3d 1167, 1170 (11th Cir. 1993)(lack of Burns _________ _____

    notice subject to plain error review), cert. denied, 510 U.S. _____ ______

    1100 (1994); United States v. Lowenstein, 1 F.3d 452, 454 ____________________________

    (6th Cir. 1993)(same).

    Fed. R. Crim. P. 52(b) provides: "Plain errors or

    defects affecting substantial rights may be noticed although

    they were not brought to the attention of the court." The





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    Court in United States v. Olano, 507 U.S. 725 (1993), teaches ______________________

    that

    the authority created by Rule 52(b) is
    circumscribed. There must be an "error"
    that is "plain" and that "affect[s]
    substantial rights." Moreover, Rule
    52(b) leaves the decision to correct the
    forfeited error within the sound
    discretion of the court of appeals, and
    the court should not exercise that
    discretion unless the error "'seriously
    affect[s] the fairness, integrity or
    public reputation of judicial
    proceedings.'"

    Id. at 732 (quoting United States v. Young, 470 U.S. 1, 15 ___ _______________________

    (1985)) (other citation omitted) (alteration in original).

    We now proceed with our Olano analysis. _____

    There must, first of all, be an "error."

    "Deviation from a legal rule is 'error' unless the rule has

    been waived." Olano, 507 U.S. at 732-33. There can be no _____

    doubt that there was a deviation from a legal rule in this

    case. As stated supra, Burns requires that "before a _____ _____

    district court can depart upward on a ground not identified

    as a ground for upward departure either in the presentence

    report or in a prehearing submission by the Government, . . .

    the district court [must] give the parties reasonable notice

    that it is contemplating such a ruling." 501 U.S. at 138.

    This rule was completely ignored.

    We reject the government's contention that, because

    the PSR contained a full recitation of the defendant's

    criminal conduct, this put defendant on notice of the factors


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    on which the court relied for the upward departure. If we

    accepted the government's theory, all defendants would be on

    notice as to any sua sponte departure so long as the ___ ______

    departure was based on facts contained in the PSR. Under

    that theory the Court's holding in Burns would become _____

    meaningless.

    It is worth noting that the sentencing facts here

    are remarkably similar to those in Burns. In Burns, at the _____ _____

    conclusion of the sentencing hearing, the district court

    announced that it was departing upward from the Guidelines

    sentencing range, despite a statement in the PSR that

    "'[t]here are no factors that would warrant departure from

    the guideline sentence.'" Id. at 131 (quoting PSR). There ___

    was a similar statement in the PSR in this case.

    The next question is whether the rule was "waived"

    or "forfeited." Olano teaches that "[w]aiver is different _____

    from forfeiture. Whereas forfeiture is the failure to make

    the timely assertion of a right, waiver is the 'intentional

    relinquishment or abandonment of a known right.'" 507 U.S.

    at 733 (quoting Johnson v. Zerbst, 304 U.S. 458, 464 (1938)). _________________

    In the case at bar there was a forfeiture, the failure to

    make the timely assertion of a right, but no waiver. "If a

    legal rule was violated during the district court

    proceedings, and if the defendant did not waive the rule,

    then there has been an 'error' within the meaning of Rule



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    52(b) despite the absence of a timely objection." 507 U.S.

    at 733-34. We have no difficulty finding error.

    Following Olano, we determine whether the error was _____

    "plain," which is defined as "synonymous with 'clear' or,

    equivalently, 'obvious'." Id. at 734. We think the error ___

    here easily fits within the definition of plain error.

    Our next inquiry is whether the plain error

    affected the substantial rights of the defendant. Id. at ___

    734. We think it did. An increase of two years in time

    spent behind bars cannot help but affect one of the most

    precious rights an individual has, to live in freedom.

    Accordingly, we find that the district court's plainly

    erroneous departure affected the defendant's substantial

    rights. Cf. United States v. Miranda-Santiago, 96 F.3d 517, ___ __________________________________

    531 (1st Cir. 1996) (finding a case in which "the claimed

    error could well have an impact on the length of defendant's

    incarceration" to present a "compelling case" for the

    application of the plain error doctrine).

    Our final step in the Olano analysis is to _____

    determine whether we should, in our discretion, order

    correction of this plain error that affects substantial

    rights. As Olano points out, "Rule 52(b) is permissive, not _____

    mandatory." 507 U.S. at 735. The standard that should guide

    us in the exercise of our remedial discretion is whether the

    error "'seriously affect[s] the fairness, integrity or public



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    reputation of judicial proceedings.'" Id. at 736 (quoting ___

    United States v. Atkinson, 297 U.S. 157, 160 (1936)) ____________________________

    (alteration in original). We think this standard has been

    met here. When a district court fails to follow a rule

    established by the Supreme Court, even though such failure

    was not intentional, there is bound to be an adverse effect

    on the fairness, integrity, and public reputation of judicial

    proceedings. Prior notice is one of the most zealously

    guarded rights of criminal defendants. It is embodied in the

    Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment. In Burns, the _____

    Court stated, "In this case, were we to read Rule 32 to

    dispense with notice, we would then have to confront the

    serious question whether notice in this setting is mandated

    by the Due Process Clause." 501 U.S. at 138. The singular

    importance of such notice in the criminal arena means that

    disregard for it cannot help but have a denigrating effect on

    the fairness, integrity, and public reputation of judicial

    proceedings.

    It must be noted that the district court expressly

    refused to depart upward on the basis of defendant's flight

    before sentencing. This was within his discretion.

    For the foregoing reasons the conviction is

    affirmed and the sentence of the district court is reduced by

    two years, the amount of additional time imposed pursuant to

    the unlawful upward departure. The total sentence of



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    incarceration to be served is twenty-two years. The judgment

    shall be so modified.

    So Ordered. So Ordered. ___________



    - Concurring Opinion Follows - - Concurring Opinion Follows -











































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    STAHL, Circuit Judge (concurring). I concur with STAHL, Circuit Judge (concurring). _____________

    my brethren that the failure to comply with the requirements

    of Fed. R. Crim. P. 32(c)(1) warrants a vacatur of Mangone's

    sentence. The right to prior notice embodied in that rule,

    however, affords a party the opportunity to comment upon the

    appropriate sentence; it does not guarantee a lesser one.

    Unlike the majority, therefore, I would remand the case to

    the district court for resentencing consistent with this

    opinion.



































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