United States v. Grady Davis , 735 F.3d 194 ( 2013 )


Menu:
  •      Case: 12-20443        Document: 00512346239          Page: 1    Date Filed: 08/19/2013
    IN THE UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIFTH CIRCUIT  United States Court of Appeals
    Fifth Circuit
    FILED
    August 19, 2013
    No. 12-20443                        Lyle W. Cayce
    Clerk
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    Plaintiff–Appellee
    v.
    GRADY DAVIS,
    Defendant–Appellant
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the Southern District of Texas
    Before ELROD and HIGGINSON, Circuit Judges, and MARTINEZ, District
    Judge.*
    HIGGINSON, Circuit Judge:
    Defendant–Appellant Grady Davis was charged with one count of
    conspiracy to commit bank fraud and with six counts of the substantive offense
    of, and aiding and abetting in, bank fraud. The charges arose from Davis’s
    alleged participation in a scheme to fraudulently obtain funds by straw credit
    card purchases. After a four-day trial, a jury acquitted Davis of the conspiracy
    *
    District Judge of the Western District of Texas, sitting by designation.
    Case: 12-20443     Document: 00512346239      Page: 2   Date Filed: 08/19/2013
    No. 12-20443
    count but found him guilty of each of the six bank-fraud counts. On appeal,
    Davis challenges, among other things, the sufficiency of the evidence
    undergirding the “financial institution” element of each of the bank-fraud crimes
    of conviction. Because we hold that the government did not support with
    sufficient proof the essential financial-institution element of the bank-fraud
    counts charged in the indictment, we REVERSE Davis’s convictions and
    REMAND for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
    FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
    Counts Two through Seven of the indictment all charge that between
    approximately June 2008 and March 2010, Davis and his co-defendants, Gentry
    Wilson and Igor Dukhin,
    aiding and abetting each other, did knowingly execute and attempt
    to execute a scheme and artifice to defraud American Express
    Company, which is a depository institution holding company as
    defined in section 3(w)(1) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act . . . .
    (Emphasis added). Wilson and Dukhin struck plea deals, under which each
    agreed to plead guilty to the conspiracy charge in Count One of the indictment
    and to cooperate with the government. Davis entered a not-guilty plea, and
    went to trial.
    At trial, the government introduced evidence that Davis played the central
    role of the “collusive merchant” in a “credit card bust-out scheme” in which Davis
    charged Wilson and Dukhin’s fraudulently-obtained credit card for fictitious
    retail transactions.   The three parties shared the reimbursement Davis
    subsequently received from the credit card company. Specifically, Dukhin
    testified that he and Wilson, looking to generate cash for a potential business
    venture, decided to obtain a high-limit corporate American Express credit card.
    2
    Case: 12-20443     Document: 00512346239     Page: 3   Date Filed: 08/19/2013
    No. 12-20443
    They purchased a shell corporation, which they renamed Applied Interests &
    Energy Development (“AIED”). They drafted and submitted an application on
    behalf of AIED for an American Express credit card, which American Express
    approved.
    To extract cash from the card, Dukhin and Wilson enlisted Davis, who
    operated a luxury car dealership, to charge the card for fictitious purchases and,
    in exchange for a percentage of the proceeds, to wire the funds American
    Express provided. According to Dukhin, Davis negotiated to retain ten percent
    of the sums he transmitted and convinced his counterparts to charge a total of
    at least $1.2 million, a sum Davis believed would give him a sufficient return to
    make his effort worthwhile. The three men also agreed to mask their purchases
    as sales of tractor-trailer trucks for use in AIED’s fictionalized petroleum
    operations. Before American Express put a stop to their enterprise, Wilson,
    Dukhin, and Davis had incurred over $621,000 in charges.
    Most relevant for our purposes, the government called the lead
    investigating agent in the case, U.S. Secret Service Special Agent Christina
    Foley, to the stand. The district court permitted the government to elicit
    testimony from Foley concerning the structure of the victim financial institution,
    overruling Davis’s objection “for lack of foundation and hearsay.” The relevant
    sequence follows:
    Q [prosecutor]. Now, we typically think of American Express as just
    a credit card company. How is it that American Express is also a
    bank?
    ....
    [A Foley.] American Express is an FDIC-insured bank. So,
    American Express is their own banking institution; and they also
    have the credit card side of the house, as well. So, they are kind of
    two entities under one American Express.
    3
    Case: 12-20443       Document: 00512346239          Page: 4     Date Filed: 08/19/2013
    No. 12-20443
    Q. And in this particular scheme, was American Express the victim
    bank?
    A. Yes.
    Q. You mentioned earlier that American Express was an FDIC
    institution. I would like to bring to your attention Government’s
    Exhibit 1.
    Do you recognize this document?
    A. Yes, ma’am.
    Q. What is it?
    A. It is the certificate that shows that American Express is FDIC
    insured.
    Q. And did you obtain this document in conjunction with your
    investigation?
    A. Yes, I did.
    Q. Now, the whole idea of whether a bank is an FDIC institution,
    would it be fair to say either a bank is an FDIC intuition [sic] or it
    is not; is that correct?
    A. Yes, that is correct.
    Q. There’s really no middle ground. So, it either is or isn’t?
    A. That is correct.
    Q. And in this case American Express is an FDIC institution,
    correct?
    A. Yes. That’s why they were able to be able to produce the
    certification showing this.
    Government’s Exhibit One, referenced in the exchange, is a Federal Deposit
    Insurance Corporation (“FDIC”) certificate for an entity named American
    Express Centurion Bank (“AECB”) that is dated July 1, 1996.1
    After the government rested its case, Davis moved under Federal Rule of
    Criminal Procedure 29 for a judgment of acquittal, arguing that the government
    did not sustain its burden of proving “each element of each count.” The district
    1
    Notably, the government called American Express Company fraud investigator
    Nicholas Bravos to the stand, but the parties did not elicit any testimony directly relevant to
    the indictment’s charge that American Express Company is a depository institution holding
    company.
    4
    Case: 12-20443     Document: 00512346239     Page: 5   Date Filed: 08/19/2013
    No. 12-20443
    court denied the motion without comment. The defense then rested and did not
    call any witnesses. In closing argument, the government did not infer from the
    proof supplied any depository institution holding company relationship in
    addressing the financial-institution element of the bank-fraud counts. Instead,
    the government argued that AECB’s FDIC-insurance certificate and the witness
    testimony described provided sufficient evidence to prove the financial-
    institution element.
    In its jury charge on the substantive bank-fraud counts, the district court
    first repeated the language in Counts Two through Seven of the indictment,
    including that the defendants “did knowingly execute and attempt to execute a
    scheme and artifice to defraud American Express Company, which is a
    depository institution holding company as defined in section 3(w)(1) of the
    Federal Deposit Insurance Act . . . .” Apparently adapting the pattern jury
    instruction to delineate the obligatory elements of the bank-fraud offenses,
    however, see Fifth Circuit Pattern Jury Instructions (Criminal Cases) 2.61
    (2012), the district court did not reiterate the indictment’s depository holding
    company theory but instead specified an unindicted, alternative version of the
    financial-institution element. It informed the jury that to convict Davis it “must
    be convinced that the Government has proved for each count under consideration
    . . . beyond a reasonable doubt . . . [t]hat AMEX [defined earlier by the district
    court to stand for ‘American Express Company’] was insured by the Federal
    Deposit Insurance Corporation.”
    As described, the jury found Davis not guilty of the conspiracy count.
    However, it returned a verdict of guilty for each of the bank-fraud offenses in
    Counts Two through Seven of the indictment. Following trial, Davis filed a
    renewed motion for a judgment of acquittal, arguing that the government did not
    5
    Case: 12-20443     Document: 00512346239     Page: 6   Date Filed: 08/19/2013
    No. 12-20443
    offer proof that “American Express Company” was a depository institution
    holding company as the indictment charged. The district court denied the
    motion.   At sentencing, the district court imposed sentences of fifty-seven
    months of imprisonment and three years of supervised release for each of Counts
    Two through Seven, to be served concurrently. The district court also found
    Davis jointly and severally liable with Dukhin for $421,997 in restitution to
    American Express. Davis timely appealed. See FED. R. APP. P. 4(b).
    Davis’s principal argument on appeal is that the government’s proof of the
    financial-institution element of the bank-fraud counts, largely in the form of
    Agent Foley’s testimony, was insufficient to support his convictions. He urges
    this court to reverse his convictions and to remand to the district court to enter
    a judgment of acquittal on Counts Two through Seven.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    When a defendant has timely moved for a judgment of acquittal, we review
    challenges to the sufficiency of the evidence de novo. United States v. Winkler,
    
    639 F.3d 692
    , 696 (5th Cir. 2011) (citation omitted); see United States v.
    Resio–Trejo, 
    45 F.3d 907
    , 910 n.6 (5th Cir. 1995). Even when examined de novo,
    “review of the sufficiency of the evidence is highly deferential to the verdict.”
    United States v. Moreno–Gonzalez, 
    662 F.3d 369
    , 372 (5th Cir. 2011) (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). “Viewing the evidence in the light most
    favorable to the government, we must determine whether any rational jury could
    conclude from the evidence presented at trial that the government had proven
    all of the elements of the offense beyond a reasonable doubt.” United States v.
    Carbajal, 
    290 F.3d 277
    , 289 (5th Cir. 2002) (citation omitted). Our de novo
    review, imbued as it is with deference, nonetheless necessarily requires us to
    consider trial evidence that countervails the jury’s verdict, and allows us to
    6
    Case: 12-20443      Document: 00512346239        Page: 7    Date Filed: 08/19/2013
    No. 12-20443
    “draw upon only reasonable inferences from the evidence to support the verdict.”
    United States v. Moreland, 
    665 F.3d 137
    , 149 (5th Cir. 2011) (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted).
    DISCUSSION
    “[T]he Due Process Clause protects the accused against conviction except
    upon proof beyond a reasonable doubt of every fact necessary to constitute the
    crime with which he is charged.” In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. 358
    , 364 (1970). The
    bank-fraud statute, 
    18 U.S.C. § 1344
    , punishes
    [w]hoever knowingly executes, or attempts to execute, a scheme or
    artifice—(1) to defraud a financial institution; or (2) to obtain any of
    the moneys . . . owned by, or under the custody or control of, a
    financial institution, by means of false or fraudulent pretenses,
    representations, or promises . . . .
    
    18 U.S.C. § 1344
     (emphases added); see United States v. McCauley, 
    253 F.3d 815
    ,
    819 (5th Cir. 2001). That the victim must be a statutorily defined financial
    institution, we have held, is “not only an essential element of the bank fraud
    crime, but . . . also necessary for the establishment of federal jurisdiction.” See
    United States v. Sanders, 
    343 F.3d 511
    , 516 (5th Cir. 2003) (citations omitted);
    Fifth Circuit Pattern Jury Instructions (Criminal Cases) 2.61 (2012).
    Davis urges that the government offered no proof on which a rational jury
    could find beyond a reasonable doubt that the government proved the financial-
    institution element the indictment charged in this case, namely that “American
    Express Company . . . is a depository institution holding company . . . . ” The
    government maintains that it adequately proved fraud on American Express
    Company under a depository institution holding company rationale.2
    2
    The government does not contest that Davis timely and adequately objected so that
    a de novo standard of review applies. See Resio–Trejo, 
    45 F.3d at
    910 n.6.
    7
    Case: 12-20443     Document: 00512346239      Page: 8   Date Filed: 08/19/2013
    No. 12-20443
    In addressing Davis’s challenge to the sufficiency of the evidence on the
    financial-institution element, we set foot on well-trodden terrain. This court has
    admonished the government to exercise care in satisfying its burden of proving
    the financial-institution element in prosecuting bank fraud and other bank-
    related offenses, lest it suffer a reversed conviction on a seeming technicality.
    See United States v. Guerrero, 
    169 F.3d 933
    , 944 (5th Cir. 1999); United States
    v. Schultz, 
    17 F.3d 723
    , 727–28 & n.11 (5th Cir. 1994); United States v. Trevino,
    
    720 F.2d 395
    , 400 (5th Cir. 1983); United States v. Platenburg, 
    657 F.2d 797
    , 799
    (5th Cir. Unit A Oct. 1981) (“[P]rosecutors have been extremely lax in the
    treatment accorded this element.”); United States v. Maner, 
    611 F.2d 107
    , 112
    (5th Cir. 1980) (“Hopefully the Attorney General will sense and remedy this
    national deficiency by directions pointing out the simple ways to prove this
    simple but indispensable fact.”). We summon these exhortations once more as
    we compare the proof the law requires with the evidence the government
    presented the jury in this case.
    As the indictment incorporates, a “financial institution” may be, among
    other things, “a depository institution holding company (as defined in section
    3(w)(1) of the Federal Deposit Insurance Act [(‘FDIA’)].” 
    18 U.S.C. § 20
    (6). The
    FDIA in turn provides that a “‘depository institution holding company’ means a
    bank holding company or a savings and loan holding company.” 
    12 U.S.C. § 1813
    (w)(1). The FDIA incorporates by reference the definition of “bank holding
    company” as “any company which has control over any bank or over any
    company that is or becomes a bank holding company by virtue of this chapter.”
    
    Id.
     § 1841(a)(1); see id. § 1813(w)(2). Thus, as the government agrees on appeal,
    in the context of this case, a depository institution holding company is a
    company that itself “has control over any bank,” id. § 1841(a)(1).
    8
    Case: 12-20443   Document: 00512346239     Page: 9   Date Filed: 08/19/2013
    No. 12-20443
    As the government also references, federal law delineates three ways a
    bank holding company may “control” a bank:
    (A) the company directly or indirectly or acting through one or more
    other persons owns, controls, or has power to vote 25 per centum or
    more of any class of voting securities of the bank or company;
    (B) the company controls in any manner the election of a majority
    of the directors or trustees of the bank or company; or
    (C) the Board determines, after notice and opportunity for hearing,
    that the company directly or indirectly exercises a controlling
    influence over the management or policies of the bank or company.
    Id. § 1841(a)(2).
    The government acknowledged at oral argument that no witness at trial
    described or spoke of a “depository institution holding company,” and none
    described the coordinate statutory requirements outlined above. Still, the
    government argues that it introduced sufficient evidence to permit the jury to
    find “that American Express Company was a bank holding company and that the
    bank it held was [AECB].” It states that it offered proof that American Express
    Company is a company that holds a bank, in the form of Agent Foley’s testimony
    that
    American Express is an FDIC-insured bank. So American Express
    is their own banking institution; and they also have the credit card
    side of the house, as well. So, they are kind of two entities under
    one American Express.
    The government specifies that it also offered proof that AECB is a bank by
    providing the 1996 certificate of FDIC insurance for AECB.           Agent Foley
    answered affirmatively the government’s question, “And in this particular
    9
    Case: 12-20443        Document: 00512346239          Page: 10     Date Filed: 08/19/2013
    No. 12-20443
    scheme, was American Express the victim bank?” The government highlights
    that Davis did not cross examine Foley on this portion of her testimony.3
    That evidence arguably may tend to show that “American Express” (read:
    American Express Company) was the victim of the offense and conducted
    business related to banking, and that AECB was a bank. It perhaps could be
    read by a reasonable jury to find that American Express Company had a
    relationship to AECB. It does not demonstrate, however, that American Express
    Company controlled AECB. Foley’s testimony, viewed to favor the verdict, does
    not mention AECB or American Express Company by name, let alone evidence
    the entities’ relative positions within the greater American Express corporate
    structure. There was no mention at trial of a third entity, American Express
    Travel Related Services, which the government admits is the intermediary
    through which American Express Company actually owns AECB. Rather than
    depicting American Express Company’s vertical relationship of control over
    3
    We do not address Davis’s additional challenge to the foundation of personal
    knowledge offered for Agent Foley’s testimony at trial about American Express’s corporate
    structure. We assume arguendo that her testimony was properly admitted and determine that
    the government nonetheless offered insufficient proof on the financial-institution element of
    the bank-fraud crimes. Nor need we decide Davis’s alternative argument that the district
    court impermissibly constructively amended the indictment by allowing proof of an alternate
    theory of the financial-institution element. See United States v. Jara–Favela, 
    686 F.3d 289
    ,
    299 (5th Cir. 2012) (“A constructive amendment may occur when the trial court through its
    instructions and facts it permits in evidence, allows proof of an essential element of the crime
    on an alternative basis provided by the statute but not charged in the indictment.”) (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). Significantly, the government does not defend that it
    presented sufficient evidence of any alternative, constructively amended theory, see United
    States v. Mize (Mize I), 
    756 F.2d 353
    , 355–57 & n.7 (5th Cir. 1985) (allowing retrial on remand
    where the government’s proof of the amended theory was sufficient), abrogated on other
    grounds as recognized by United States v. Dixon, 
    273 F.3d 636
    , 639 n.1 (5th Cir. 2001); United
    States v. Mize (Mize II), 
    820 F.2d 118
    , 120 (5th Cir. 1987) (describing the holding in Mize I),
    urging instead that it proved the crime as charged in the indictment.
    10
    Case: 12-20443    Document: 00512346239      Page: 11   Date Filed: 08/19/2013
    No. 12-20443
    AECB, Foley’s testimony appears to posit “two entities” in a horizontal
    relationship, as different “side[s] of the house.”
    In Schultz, 
    17 F.3d at 724
    , we reviewed bank-fraud and related bank-
    offense convictions in which the indictment charged that the victim, Texas
    Commerce Bank–Sugar Land (“TCB–Sugar Land”), was an FDIC-insured
    institution. The proof the government offered at trial, however, was the FDIC
    insurance certificate of another bank, TCB–National Association, and the
    testimony of TCB–Sugar Land officers vaguely referencing the fact that their
    bank was under the control of other Texas Commerce Banks. 
    Id.
     at 725–26.
    This court rejected the government’s argument that the evidence well proved
    that TCB–Sugar Land was FDIC insured by virtue of TCB–National
    Association’s policy, noting that both the FDIC certificate’s restrictions and
    Texas law limits on branch banking made that theory of umbrella insurance
    coverage unlikely. 
    Id.
     at 726–27. The court observed that “[a]lthough we agree
    that the Government proved that TCB–Sugar Land was, in some way, related
    to TCB–Stafford, TCB–Houston, and to a larger, but nebulous, Texas Commerce
    Bank organization, we find that the Government failed to prove that TCB–Sugar
    Land was insured by the FDIC—whether under TCB–National Association’s
    policy or otherwise.” 
    Id. at 726
    ; see also United States v. Alexander, 
    679 F.3d 721
    , 727–28 (8th Cir. 2012) (citing Schultz, reaching a similar result with regard
    to Bank of America entities, and vacating the defendant’s convictions for making
    false statements for the purpose of influencing an FDIC-insured financial
    institution). An analogous lack of clarity characterizes the evidence presented
    here. The trial testimony and exhibits do not address each relevant American
    Express entity’s distinct corporate identity, nor does the evidence depict the
    entities’ inter-relationship in anything other than oblique and inscrutable terms.
    11
    Case: 12-20443    Document: 00512346239      Page: 12    Date Filed: 08/19/2013
    No. 12-20443
    Such evidence, lacking in descriptive detail, was insufficient in Schultz, and we
    find it similarly inadequate here.
    The government additionally points to its Exhibit Five, AIED’s credit card
    account statements, which bear the American Express logo and name. Those
    statements do not, however, provide insight into the controlling relationship or
    corporate structure of the relevant entities. Cf. Schultz, 
    17 F.3d at
    726 n.7 (“An
    FDIC logo on a check no more proves beyond a reasonable doubt that the bank
    in question has FDIC insurance than a National Basketball Association logo on
    a jacket proves that its wearer is a professional basketball player.”).
    The government finally cites other courts’ descriptions, in civil suits
    raising unrelated claims, of American Express’s corporate structure. See, e.g.,
    Homa v. Am. Express Co., 
    558 F.3d 225
    , 226 (3d Cir. 2009) (describing AECB as
    a bank incorporated in Utah that issues American Express credit cards and
    explaining that American Express Company, a New York corporation, is AECB’s
    ultimate parent), abrogated on other grounds as recognized by Litman v. Cellco
    P’ship, 
    655 F.3d 225
    , 230 (3d Cir. 2011); Aneke v. Am. Express Travel Related
    Servs., Inc., 
    841 F. Supp. 2d 368
    , 370 n.2 (D.D.C. 2012). The government cannot
    carry its burden in this case by assuring us that other litigants, in other trial
    courts, in other legal contexts, have introduced the requisite evidence. See
    Trevino, 
    720 F.2d at 398
    ; United States v. Reasor, 
    418 F.3d 466
    , 474 (5th Cir.
    2005).
    Reversal may be required even though the government might have
    discharged its burden of proof with relative ease. See Schultz, 
    17 F.3d at 727
    (vacating bank-fraud convictions even though the government might have
    elicited the lacking evidence from bank officials who provided other testimony
    at trial); Platenburg, 
    657 F.2d at 799
     (reversing a conviction and noting that this
    12
    Case: 12-20443       Document: 00512346239          Page: 13     Date Filed: 08/19/2013
    No. 12-20443
    court in Maner, 
    611 F.2d at 112
    , had previously “suggest[ed] a very simple and
    easy method of proving this element”). That fact cannot lessen the constitutional
    infirmity we are called to address. See In re Winship, 
    397 U.S. at 364
    .
    We conclude that the government’s evidence was not sufficient to prove a
    depository institution holding company theory of the financial-institution
    element. At bottom, to convict Davis on such a theory, a factfinder would be
    forced to strain the trial evidence beyond the limits even our justly deferential
    review of jury verdicts permits.          We do not reach this conclusion lightly,
    particularly given the government’s strong proof as to Davis’s conduct relating
    to other of the elements of the bank-fraud offenses. We can only note, as we
    have previously, that greater attention to this issue at trial would advance the
    efficient and fair administration of criminal justice.4
    CONCLUSION
    We hold that the government did not offer evidence sufficient for any
    reasonable jury to find beyond a reasonable doubt that American Express
    Company was a depository institution holding company, hence we REVERSE
    and REMAND for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.5
    4
    Indeed, in this case, inattention arguably led to further infirmity when the
    government in closing argument and the district court in the jury instructions referred to an
    uncharged theory of the financial-institution element.
    5
    Our decision, resting as it does on insufficiency of the evidence, “compels dismissal
    of” the bank-fraud counts on remand, “not just remand for a new trial with better evidence.”
    Trevino, 720 F.3d at 401; see Burks v. United States, 
    437 U.S. 1
    , 10–11, 16–18 (1978).
    13