United States v. Lherrison ( 1997 )


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  • [NOT FOR PUBLICATION]
    United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 96-1827
    UNITED STATES,
    Appellee,
    v.
    EVELYN LHERISSON,
    Defendant - Appellant.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Michael A. Ponsor, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Boudin, Circuit Judge,
    John R. Gibson,* Senior Circuit Judge,
    and Pollak,** Senior District Judge.
    John L. Roberts, by appointment of the Court, for appellant.
    Andrew Levchuk,  Assistant United States Attorney, with whom
    Donald  K.  Stern,  United  States Attorney,  was  on  brief  for
    appellee.
    December 2, 1997
    *  Of the Eighth Circuit, sitting by designation.
    **    Of  the  Eastern  District  of  Pennsylvania,  sitting   by
    designation.
    Per  Curiam.   Evelyn Lherisson  was  convicted of  one
    Per  Curiam.
    count of bank  fraud, in violation of 18 U.S.C.   1344, and three
    counts   of  making  false  statements  to  a  federally  insured
    financial  institution, in  violation of  18 U.S.C.    1014.   On
    appeal she  argues that (1)  the government engaged  in selective
    prosecution   in  prosecuting  her  but  not  the  more  culpable
    principal  of  the  fraud,  (2)  that  she  received  ineffective
    assistance  of counsel,  and  (3)  that  there  was  insufficient
    evidence  to support the jury s  findings of guilt  on any of the
    four  counts of  which she  was convicted.   Because  we find  no
    reversible error, we affirm.
    I.
    In July  of 1988, Evelyn  Lherisson, who  represented
    herself as the  trustee of a substantial family  trust located in
    the Cayman Islands (the "LPH trust"), was introduced to Mary Anne
    Krupsak, a  partner in the Albany office of  a New York law firm.
    At the time, Krupsak was a shareholder in Valyte International, a
    small  corporation  that  was  undergoing  financial  difficulty.
    Lherisson  told Krupsak  that  she was  interested  in using  her
    family trust s assets to help small businesses such as Valyte and
    gave Krupsak various  documents that purported to confirm some of
    the trust s assets.
    In the  fall of  1988, Valyte  began negotiations  with
    Heritage  NIS-Bank  for  Savings concerning  a  $350,000  line of
    credit Heritage had extended to Valyte.  Valyte had drawn heavily
    on the line  of credit and Heritage  had lost some  confidence in
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    Valyte s ability to pay its debts.  On December 27, 1988, Krupsak
    and  the other  shareholders met  with  Heritage officer  Michael
    Audette  and  Heritage  attorney  Steven  Weiss  to  discuss  the
    possibility   of   individual   Valyte   shareholders   providing
    additional collateral  for the loans in exchange for Heritage not
    calling  in  Valyte s  obligations.    At  that  meeting  Krupsak
    informed Audette and Weiss that Evelyn Lherisson might be able to
    assist  in  providing  collateral  for  Valyte s  obligations  to
    Heritage.   Audette then spoke  on the phone with  Lherisson, who
    advised  him that  she would  obtain a  letter of  credit for  $1
    million as additional collateral for the Valyte loan.
    On December  29, 1988,  a $1  million letter of  credit
    made out  to Krupsak and  drawn on  the First Investment  Bank of
    Garland,  Texas, was  faxed to  Heritage.  Heritage  told Krupsak
    that  it  wanted  the   letter  modified  to  name   Heritage  as
    beneficiary  instead  of  Krupsak.   Krupsak  testified  that she
    related  this request, along with other proposed modifications to
    the December 29, 1988 letter of credit, to Lherisson, who replied
    that she would  not modify the letter  but that she would  send a
    new letter  of credit to  replace it.   Krupsak told Heritage  of
    Lherisson s  plan to  send  a new  letter of  credit  and, as  an
    interim measure, assigned her interest  in the December 29,  1988
    letter of credit to Heritage.
    On  March  24,  1989,  Heritage  received  a  document,
    bearing the signature  of Lherisson as trustee of  the LPH trust,
    constituting  a  $1   million  letter  of  credit   to  Heritage.
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    Thereafter,  Lherisson and  Krupsak  commenced negotiations  with
    Heritage for a  $4 million loan to Valyte to be secured by assets
    of  the LPH  trust.  On  April 29,  1989, in support  of the loan
    application,  Krupsak faxed  a  copy  of  an  "Irrevocable  Trust
    Agreement"  and a  separate specimen  "Trust  Agreement" both  of
    which  were  signed by  Lherisson.    On  May 8,  1989,  Heritage
    received a  letter, signed  by Krupsak s secretary  on behalf  of
    Lherisson, which stated  that the proposed $4  million loan would
    be collateralized by United States Treasury notes.
    At  trial,  the  government  introduced  evidence  that
    neither the  First Investment Bank  of Garland nor the  LPH trust
    ever existed.   The tax identification  number used by  Lherisson
    for the LPH trust was not assigned to any person or  business and
    the registrar of the Cayman  Islands testified that no such trust
    was registered with his  office.  A handwriting  expert testified
    that the signature on the March 24, 1989 letter of credit  was in
    fact  Lherisson s, and  Krupsak s  secretary  testified that  she
    never signed or  sent any correspondence  on behalf of  Lherisson
    without being directed to do so by Lherisson herself.
    The jury  found Lherisson guilty  of one count  of bank
    fraud, in  violation of  18 U.S.C.    1344,  and three  counts of
    making  false  statements  to   a  federally  insured   financial
    institution,  in  violation of  18  U.S.C.     1014.   The  false
    statement counts were  based on:  1) the $1  million December 29,
    1988 letter of credit; 2) the $1 million March 24, 1989 letter of
    credit; and 3) the May 8, 1989 letter.
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    Post-trial,   Lherisson    underwent   a    psychiatric
    examination.   At sentencing, Lherisson s attorney  asserted that
    Lherisson   suffered  from  delusions  and  was  operating  in  a
    diminished mental  state during  the time  she was  communicating
    with   Krupsak  and  Heritage.    The  district  court  sentenced
    Lherisson to 15  months imprisonment and three  years  supervised
    release.
    II.
    Lherisson  advances  three  arguments  in this  appeal.
    First, Lherisson argues that her convictions arose from selective
    prosecution  because the government  chose to prosecute  her ("an
    indigent  black  woman who  was  suffering from  a  severe mental
    disability")  and not Mary  Anne Krupsak (a  "white, non-disabled
    person" with "political and financial clout").  Second, Lherisson
    claims  that she  received  ineffective  assistance  of  counsel.
    Third, Lherisson claims  that there was insufficient  evidence to
    support the jury s verdict.
    Lherisson did not raise her selective prosecution claim
    prior to  trial  as required  by  Fed.  R. Crim.  P.  12(b),  and
    therefore has waived this claim, Fed. R. Crim. P. 12(f), see also
    Tracey v. United States, 
    739 F.2d 679
    , 682 (1st Cir. 1984), cert.
    denied, 
    469 U.S. 1109
     (1985), unless "exceptional circumstances"
    exist  which excuse  her failure to  raise the claim  in a timely
    fashion.  See United States v. Gary, 
    74 F.3d 304
    , 313 (1st Cir.),
    cert. denied, 
    116 S. Ct. 2567
     (1996).  Lherisson argues  that her
    claim of selective  prosecution became manifest only  after trial
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    when  the District  Court  ordered and  obtained  reports on  her
    mental condition.
    Lherisson attributes her failure to undergo psychiatric
    evaluation (and hence her failure to raise the claim of selective
    prosecution) prior to trial  to the ineffectiveness of her  trial
    counsel.    However,  Lherisson  did  not   raise  the  claim  of
    ineffective  assistance of counsel before the district court, and
    therefore we are  left without the factual  development necessary
    for adequate  review.  Accordingly, we will  follow our customary
    practice  of  not  addressing claims  of  ineffective  assistance
    raised  for the  first  time on  appeal.   See  United States  v.
    Carrington, 
    96 F.3d 1
    , 6 (1st  Cir. 1996), cert.  denied, 
    117 S. Ct. 1328
     (1997).   Our declination to consider this  issue now is
    without prejudice to  Lherisson s entitlement to raise  the issue
    in a collateral  challenge to her conviction.   See United States
    v. Mala, 
    7 F.3d 1058
    , 1063 (1st Cir. 1993).
    In her  final claim,  Lherisson argues  that there  was
    insufficient evidence to support the jury s verdict.  This  claim
    takes two  forms.   First,  she  asserts that  she could  not  be
    convicted  of aiding and abetting without  evidence of a culpable
    principal.  However,  on each count the district court instructed
    the  jury in  conformity with  18 U.S.C.    2(b),  which provides
    that:
    [w]hoever willfully causes an  act to be done
    which if directly performed by him or another
    would  be  an   offense  against  the  United
    States, is punishable as a principal.
    18 U.S.C.    2(b).  Under  this section, a culpable  principal is
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    not required.   "[A] defendant may  be convicted as  an aider and
    abettor through proof that he caused an innocent person to commit
    a criminal  offense."  United  States v. Tashjian, 
    660 F.2d 829
    ,
    842  n.26  (1st Cir.)(alterations  and  internal  quotation marks
    omitted),  cert. denied,  
    454 U.S. 1102
     (1981); see  also United
    States v. Dodd, 
    43 F.3d 759
    , 762-63 (1st Cir. 1995).
    Lherisson  also argues that the government did not show
    that  her statements  to Heritage  were made  with the  intent to
    defraud.   Where  a defendant challenges  the sufficiency  of the
    evidence,  this court  must  look to  see  "whether, drawing  all
    inferences in the government s favor, a rational jury  could find
    guilt beyond  a reasonable  doubt."   United States v.  Montilla-
    Rivera, 
    115 F.3d 1060
    , 1063 (1st  Cir. 1997).  Lherisson does not
    dispute  that the  trust never  existed and  that the  letters of
    December 29, 1988,  March 24, 1989, and  May 8, 1989  were false.
    Audette  and Krupsak both testified that Lherisson was aware that
    Valyte s  negotiations  with  Heritage were  for  the  purpose of
    preventing Heritage from  calling in Valyte s loans  or obtaining
    new loans for Valyte.  A jury could have reasonably inferred that
    Lherisson  knew the  trust  did  not exist  and  that, in  making
    statements  about the  trust to  Krupsak  and representatives  of
    Heritage at  a time she knew that they  believed she was going to
    use the  trust s assets to  help Valyte in its  negotiations with
    Heritage, Lherisson  intended to  defraud Heritage.   The  jury s
    verdict is therefore supported by sufficient evidence.
    III.
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    For the foregoing reasons, the judgment of the district
    court is affirmed.
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