State v. Fiorenzano

690 A.2d 857, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 55, 1997 WL 101102
CourtSupreme Court of Rhode Island
DecidedMarch 5, 1997
Docket94-420-C.A.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 690 A.2d 857 (State v. Fiorenzano) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Rhode Island primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State v. Fiorenzano, 690 A.2d 857, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 55, 1997 WL 101102 (R.I. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

FLANDERS, Justice.

Found “false and perfidious” 1 after a jury-waived trial before a Superior Court justice, *858 the defendant, Prank Fiorenzano, a former state representative and disbarred attorney, appeals from a judgment convicting him of obtaining money by false pretenses. He claims the trial justice committed reversible error in ruling that G.L.1956 § 11411-4 (the obtaining-money-or-property-by-false-pretenses-or-personation statute) did not require proof that the defendant intended to convert or misappropriate the victim’s funds or to deprive the victim of his or her money permanently. The defendant also contends that the trial justice improperly denied his motion to exclude all evidence of events occurring before March 9, 1988, the effective date of the General Assembly’s adoption of a ten-year limitations period for § 11 — 41—4 offenses. The 1988 enactment expressly provides that it applies “to all criminal acts for which the statute of limitations under current law has not yet expired as of’ March 9,1988. P.L.1988, ch. 15, § 2. Notwithstanding that the “current law” provided a three-year limitations period which had not yet expired as of the new law’s 1988 enactment date, the defendant claims that the application of the 1988 amendment to his pre-enactment conduct violates the ex post facto clauses of the State and Federal Constitutions. 2 For the reasons explained below, we disagree and uphold the defendant’s conviction.

Facts

The defendant’s victim was Albert DelMas-tro (DelMastro), a retired maintenance worker whose formal education ended after the eighth grade. They first met when defendant was campaigning to be elected as a state representative for the Silver Lake district in Providence. Eventually DelMastro engaged defendant to draft a will for him. In doing so, defendant learned of DelMas-tro’s financial wherewithal. The defendant then induced DelMastro to part with his life savings by representing that he would invest it for him in a way that would yield a higher return than would be possible if DelMastro kept his money on deposit with local banks.

The defendant told DelMastro that he would invest his savings for him through IDS Financial Services, Inc. (IDS), a company that provides various investment products and other financial services. In time, defendant inveigled DelMastro into giving him checks and cash payments totaling over $82,-000, all of which was supposed to be invested with IDS. Moreover, defendant told Del-Mastro to make the checks payable to himself, to cash them, and then to give the proceeds to defendant because defendant was supposedly having problems cashing checks at his own bank. The defendant insinuated that this method of transferring the money would enable him to avoid the inconvenience of having to show his bank various credentials before it would negotiate DelMastro’s checks. 3

Although DelMastro pressed defendant to obtain for him an investment contract from IDS and to provide him with some other kind of documentation that would confirm his IDS investments, defendant kept putting him off by telling him that these kinds of things take a long time to obtain. At one point defendant cited the Rhode Island banking crisis as one reason why he was unable to provide DelMastro with tangible evidence that his IDS investments had appreciated as handsomely as defendant represented they would.

Finally, in October of 1989, DelMastro told defendant that he would not give him another penny until he came up with some kind of *859 proof that his money had in fact been given to IDS for investment on his behalf as defendant had repeatedly represented. When defendant still failed to produce the requested documentation, DelMastro contacted the authorities. Eventually defendant was indicted.

At trial an IDS office administrator testified that IDS had never recorded any investments in DelMastro’s name and that neither defendant nor the person that he had identified to DelMastro as his assistant had ever been an investor or employee of IDS. The defendant did not testify at trial and presented no evidence on his behalf.

On these facts the trial justice concluded that defendant was guilty of obtaining money from DelMastro under false pretenses. He found as a fact that for some three years defendant enticed DelMastro to part with a sum in excess of $80,000 by representing to him that he would invest the money through IDS and that this investment would yield far greater returns than could be realized by any bank interest DelMastro could obtain via local savings accounts and certificates of deposit. The trial justice also found that defendant never intended to invest DelMastro’s money with IDS or -with any other legitimate source and that he had fraudulently induced DelMastro to part with his money. He further noted that defendant did not begin to repay DelMastro in any substantial way until after his misconduct had been discovered and that he did not complete the repayment until virtually the eve of his criminal trial.

We turn now to defendant’s arguments on appeal and discuss why they do not persuade us to reverse his conviction.

Analysis

I

An Intention to Convert or to Deprive Permanently Is Not an Element of the Crime of Obtaining Money by False Pretenses

General Laws 1956 § 11-41-4 provides, in pertinent part, as follows: “Every person who shall obtain from another designedly, by any false pretense or pretenses, any money * * * or other property, with intent to cheat or defraud * * * and shall thereby receive any money * * * shall be deemed guilty of larceny.” Thus, as applied to these facts, there are two basic elements for this crime: (1) that the defendant obtain money from another by any false pretense or pretenses and (2) that the defendant obtained the money with the “intent to cheat or defraud.” There is no requirement in the plain language of the statute that the defendant intend to convert or to misappropriate funds or to deprive the victim permanently of any money so obtained. Rather, the statute reflects the practical reality that by misrepresenting how an investment will be used, one can still cheat and defraud investors without ever intending to deprive them of their money permanently. Indeed, many scam artists rationalize their actions by claiming that they always intended to repay their victims, usually with a greater return on their investment than even their victims expected. Of course, not only are such intentions of making good seldom realized but they are irrelevant to obtaining money by false pretenses. In this crime, the victim is mulcted and the dastardly deed is done the moment the money is obtained designedly by the defendant for a use other than that represented to the victim.

In State v. LaRoche, 683 A.2d 989 (R.I.1996), we defined the phrase “intent to defraud” as it is used in the false-pretenses statute to mean “an intention to deceive another person, and to induce such other person, in reliance upon such deception, to assume, create, transfer, alter or terminate [that other person’s] * * * right, obligation or power with reference to property.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
690 A.2d 857, 1997 R.I. LEXIS 55, 1997 WL 101102, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-fiorenzano-ri-1997.