Edward Bontkowski v. United States

850 F.2d 306, 1988 WL 64538
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 19, 1988
Docket86-1871, 86-1908
StatusPublished
Cited by81 cases

This text of 850 F.2d 306 (Edward Bontkowski v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Edward Bontkowski v. United States, 850 F.2d 306, 1988 WL 64538 (7th Cir. 1988).

Opinions

KANNE, Circuit Judge.

Petitioner-appellant, Edward Bontkow-ski, appeals the district court’s dismissal of his two petitions filed pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2255.1 Bontkowski sought to vacate his [308]*308convictions based on guilty pleas to two separate and unrelated indictments — one charging him with conspiracy to distribute and distribution of cocaine and a second charging him with aiding and abetting in the misapplication of bank funds. Bont-kowski claims his conviction of the cocaine charge should have been vacated because the court incorrectly sentenced him. He also contends his conviction of the bank fund misapplication charge should have been vacated because the plea, on which it was based, was not voluntary and because the court had an insufficient factual basis for accepting it.

We agree with the district court that Bontkowski’s § 2255 petition was properly dismissed with respect to the cocaine charge and we agree that Bontkowski’s failure to raise certain claims regarding the bank fraud charge resulted in a waiver of those claims. However, we also find that Bontkowski’s § 2255 petition, with respect to the claim that his plea to the bank fraud charge was based on insufficient facts, should be remanded for review by the district court in light of our recent decision in a related case.

I.

In the spring of 1984, Bontkowski and seven co-defendants were named in a twenty-five count indictment. They were charged with transporting stolen property, aiding and abetting in the misapplication of bank funds, and making false statements to a bank. This case was assigned to Judge Paul Plunkett. Later that summer, Bontkowski and Elena Vavadakis (whom Bontkowski later married) were indicted by a separate grand jury for multiple counts of cocaine distribution, conspiracy, and extortion. This case was assigned to Judge George Leighton.

Separate plea agreements were negotiated in each case. The cocaine case was transferred to Judge Plunkett so that pleas in both cases could be accepted by the same judge.

Bontkowski pled guilty to the two counts of the bank fraud indictment which charged him with aiding and abetting in the misapplication of bank funds. As to this indictment, he was sentenced to four years imprisonment for each count, with the sentences to be served concurrently.

At the time Bontkowski pled guilty to the bank fraud charges, he also pled guilty to two counts, in the unrelated drag indictment, of conspiring to distribute cocaine and to distributing cocaine. With regard to the drag indictment, Bontkowski was sentenced to four years imprisonment followed by a five year period of probation and a special parole term of three years. The sentence imposed in the drag indictment was concurrent to the sentence imposed under the bank fraud indictment.

Because the facts leading to the acceptance of the guilty pleas to the various charges are pertinent to Bontkowski’s § 2255 petitions, we will set them out in some detail.

A.

As we described in the related case involving one of Bontkowski’s co-defendants,2 Bontkowski and several others, including Ronald Berkovitz and William Giova, were charged with defrauding a federal bank. Berkovitz allegedly masterminded the conspiracy which involved duping small business operators into obtaining loans for him from Giova and the First National Bank of Cicero.

According to Bontkowski, Berkovitz approached him with a plan whereby Bont-kowski could obtain quick financing for his tracking company and some additional, much-needed cash. All Bontkowski had to do was to approach Giova, an officer at the Cicero bank, and apply for a loan. Berko-vitz would then receive a portion of Bont-kowski’s loan proceeds presumably to invest in Berkovitz’s get-rich-quick enterprise.

Bontkowski contends that unbeknownst to him, Berkovitz and Giova already had a prior history of engaging in loan transac[309]*309tions. Dealing with Giova, Berkovitz had borrowed money directly from and brokered loans for the Cicero bank. With regard to the brokered loans, Berkovitz referred a series of large (but usually high risk) borrowers to the Cicero Bank. Giova then approved these brokered loans. When these loans proved to be a serious liability to the bank, the bank board ordered Giova to stop accepting loans brokered by Berko-vitz. Moreover, under federal lending limit laws, Giova was no longer permitted to make direct loans to Berkovitz. Ever resourceful, Berkovitz sought out small business owners who were in a financial pinch, and encouraged them to apply directly to Giova for loans. A portion of the loans then went to Berkovitz, a fact of which Giova and the borrowers were allegedly aware but the bank management was not. Thus, Berkovitz continued to receive a portion of loans, the Cicero Bank, in effect, was still accepting brokered loans, and Giova continued to make loans to Berkovitz in violation of federal lending limits.

Of specific relevance here, Berkovitz called Giova and told him that he had provided Bontkowski with bearer bonds which Bontkowski was going to use as collateral to obtain two loans from Giova. One loan was for $370,000.00, the other for $100,-000.00. Unfortunately, the bonds Bont-kowski used as collateral were stolen. Bontkowski purportedly did not know the bonds were stolen. However, Bontkowski was aware, as he admitted at the time of his plea, that a portion of his loans was to go to Berkovitz.

When the Berkovitz-Giova scheme was uncovered, Bontkowski was charged with one count of aiding and abetting in the misapplication of bank funds for each loan for which he had signed.

Bontkowski pled guilty to the two counts of the indictment, admitting that when he applied for the two loans, he knew that a portion of the proceeds were to go to Ber-kovitz. At the time of the plea, the government’s evidence as to Bontkowski’s participation in the loan scheme was presented as follows:

[AUSA]: Judge, it is charged in Counts 10 and 11 of the indictment that on February 26, 1982 Mr. Bontkowski obtained two loans at the First National Bank of Cicero, one for $370,000.00, the other for $100,000.00. The government’s evidence would show first that the deposits of that bank are insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation and were insured at the time he obtained the loans.
The government’s evidence would also show that the collateral for those loans was $495,000.00 worth of bearer bonds which Mr. Bontkowski didn’t own and which in fact had been stolen in New York City and transported to Chicago by Clarence Wade, a co-defendant.
The government’s evidence would also show that the defendant was only a partial beneficiary of the loan proceeds and that in fact most of the money went to Ronald Berkowitz [sic], another co-defendant. By signing numerous checks, cashing checks and turning the money over to Mr. Berkowitz [sic], and by further concealing from the bank through its records, and not disclosing the existence of Mr. Berkowitz [sic] and the fact he was a beneficiary of the loan, other than to Mr. Giova, who is a co-defendant, the defendant aided and abetted Mr. Giova in misapplying the bank funds. (Emphasis added.)

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Bluebook (online)
850 F.2d 306, 1988 WL 64538, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/edward-bontkowski-v-united-states-ca7-1988.