People v. Amadio

22 Cal. App. 3d 7, 98 Cal. Rptr. 909, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1662
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedDecember 14, 1971
DocketCrim. 17352
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 22 Cal. App. 3d 7 (People v. Amadio) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
People v. Amadio, 22 Cal. App. 3d 7, 98 Cal. Rptr. 909, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1662 (Cal. Ct. App. 1971).

Opinion

Opinion

ROTH, P. J.

Amadio, Kaldenberg, Scalvace and Sinatra were convicted of conspiracy (Pen. Code, § 182) to receive stolen property (count I) and of receiving stolen property (Pen. Code, § 496), as alleged in counts III, IV and V. 1 As to Amadio, Kaldenberg and Scalvace, execution of the sen *10 tences on counts IV and V was stayed, 2 they were sentenced to state prison, and now appeal from the judgments of conviction. Sinatra appeals from the judgment (order granting probation) on counts I, III, IV and V.

During the course of two burglaries of the Reese Drug Store in St. Charles, Missouri in November 1967, six books of money orders were taken, each book having a maximum value of $2,000. In February 1968 the Buehler Brothers Supermarket of Chicago Heights, Illinois was burglarized and a large number of American Express Money Orders together with the appropriate imprinting equipment, as well as cash and payroll and personal checks, were stolen; and in September 1966 approximately $375,-000 in unissued Series E Bonds, certificates of deposit and other properties were stolen in the burglary of the Belle State Bank of Belle, Missouri. The properties stolen on these three occasions formed the bases of counts III, IV and V, respectively, to wit: the money orders (III), the American Express Money Orders (count IV) and the Series E Bonds together with other properties (V). Count I charged a conspiracy of the receipt of items of stolen property which extended to “stolen money orders, Series E United States Government Savings Bonds, travelers checks, . . . certificates of deposit, real estate deeds, stock certificates, jewelry, gold, and other items . . .’’and thus was of broader scope than counts III, IV or V, taken singly. As will be seen below, this fact, conceded by appellants, vitiates their argument that the imposition of sentences on counts I and II amounted to double punishment.

Appellant Sinatra met Clarence Baumgarten, age 81, in May 1968. Baumgarten, convicted in 1962 and 1967 of grand theft, was, unbeknownst to Sinatra, a paid informant utilized by various law enforcement agencies in the recovery of stolen property. Baumgarten arranged a meeting in early June between Sinatra and Sergeant Roberson of the Los Angeles police. Roberson whose real identity was, of course, known to Baumgarten, appeared at the first meeting which was held in a television studio in Los Angeles as an airplane pilot and brother-in-law of Baumgarten.

At a meeting, during which Baumgarten played the part of a “wealthy T.V. producer,” Sinatra represented to Roberson that he could get gold, diamonds, counterfeit money, bonds, in fact anything that was desired, that he had a couple of good cat burglars working for him, and that he had an uncle who was a member of the Mafia. Specifically, Sinatra agreed to show samples of American Express Money Orders and furs, a promise which he redeemed next day by displaying two money orders and five mink stoles which he stated were “hot” but which wouldn’t show up on a “hot sheet” *11 for at least two weeks. (A check revealed that the money orders in question had been reported stolen, apparently from the Reese Drug Store (count III).)

At a third meeting on June 13, 1968, Sinatra told Roberson and Baumgarten that he had $375,000 worth of stolen Series E Bonds (count V). Sinatra was paid $175 on this occasion for the furs to show that Baumgarten and Roberson were capable of paying for other merchandise.

Next day, Baumgarten and Roberson met with Sinatra and a (nonappealing) co-defendant Rosner, at a residence selected for its pretentiousness, purportedly Baumgarten’s. Fifteen thousand dollars worth of stolen money orders were discussed, and the possibility of a future deal extending to 15 million dollars of stolen money orders was suggested by Rosner. Baumgarten, declining to “fool” with the former small amount, got a commitment with Roberson’s assistance for the 15 million dollar “package” which Sinatra said would be flown ini from Florida on a Lear jet that night. Sinatra, Scalvace and Rosner were to receive 20 percent of the face amount of the money orders.

The residence was staked out by FBI agents and Los Angeles police until midnight but no one appeared. The following day at 9 a.m., Sinatra and Rosner delivered $16,000 of American Express’ and Consumers’ money orders which had been taken in the Reese Drug Store burglary. (Count III.)

On June 18, Sinatra appeared at Baumgarten’s, stating that the Lear jet had been lost, and that there were $375,000 of “bare faced” bonds at the “bottom of the hill.” Baumgarten agreed to pay 40 percent (of the face value) and Sinatra left to return later with Kaldenberg whom he introduced as the “big man . . . the one we have to satisfy.” Kaldenberg, in turn, stated to the assemblage: “Now, we’re going to get right down to business. We have $375,000 worth of stolen bonds, and how do we know that we are safe and you are not the police?” After a sharp exchange, Kaldenberg, mollified but not reassured, left, saying that if Baumgarten and Roberson were the police there would be a lot of bodies lying “all over the place” on his return.

Sinatra and Kaldenberg reappeared within 15 minutes, accompanied by a third man (Swinehart). Roberson, fearing a gun battle because of Kaldenberg’s last statement, arrested all three men. Several other policemen were in and outside the house at this moment. Scaivace and Rosner were located at the nearby Carolina Pine’s Restaurant, arrested and brought to Baumgarten’s.

Ignition keys identified by Roberson as belonging to a sports car were *12 found on the seat in the house which had been occupied by Kaldenberg’s companion Swinehart. A search for the car which fit the keys was made unsuccessfully at the Carolina Pines Restaurant but the vehicle was finally found by Roberson on June 2.1 four blocks from the restaurant. After having placed the car under surveillance, Roberson left to get a search warrant but in any event never returned to the vehicle.

The vehicle in question had been transferred by one Stanton to Gram upon the latters’ agreement to make the payments thereon. Gram, 3 in turn, had shared the car with Kaldenberg, the latter having the car approximately 90 percent of the time. Gram, upon his arrest on June 21, gave his written consent for the search of the car. That search revealed the Series E Bonds taken during the Belle State Bank burglary (count V) as well as other properties.

While, as we have seen, appellants Kaldenberg, Scalvace and Sinatra were attempting to sell the contraband to Baumgarten and Roberson, their confederate and co-appellant Amadio was trying to sell all and/or part of the same money orders, checks and securities to Jimmie Anderson, a real estate and hotel consultant.

Anderson had been introduced to Amadio by Irving Richards, an investigator retained by the Bank of America. Richards, working undercover, had met Amadio in April 1968 in an effort to buy some counterfeit Bank of America travelers checks.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
22 Cal. App. 3d 7, 98 Cal. Rptr. 909, 1971 Cal. App. LEXIS 1662, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/people-v-amadio-calctapp-1971.