United States v. Adelson

441 F. Supp. 2d 506, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49253, 2006 WL 2008727
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedJuly 20, 2006
DocketS2 05 CR. 325(JSR)
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 441 F. Supp. 2d 506 (United States v. Adelson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Adelson, 441 F. Supp. 2d 506, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49253, 2006 WL 2008727 (S.D.N.Y. 2006).

Opinion

SENTENCE MEMORANDUM

RAKOFF, District Judge.

This is one of those cases in which calculations under the Sentencing Guidelines lead to a result so patently unreasonable as to require the Court to place greater emphasis on other sentencing factors to derive a sentence that comports with federal law.

*507 Superseding indictment S2 05 Cr. 325(JSR), filed September 28, 2005, charged defendant Richard P. Adelson with one count of securities fraud, eight counts of causing false reports to be filed with the U.S. Securities and Exchange Commission (“S.E.C.”), two counts of soliciting proxies through false statements, and one count of conspiring with others to commit such acts. The gist of the indictment was that Adelson, as Chief Operating Officer and, (eventually) President of Im-path, Inc. — a public company specializing in cancer diagnosis testing — -joined a conspiracy, initially concocted by others, to materially overstate Impath’s financial results, thereby artificially inflating the price of its stock.

It was the Government’s theory that the conspiracy began in late 1999, that Adelson joined it in 2001, and that it continued until mid-2003. However, on February 16, 2006, following a two-week trial, a jury, while convicting Adelson of conspiracy, securities fraud, and the three of the false filing counts that related to filings made in the latter half of 2002, acquitted him of all seven counts that related to earlier filings.

The most likely reading of the jury’s verdict — and one that the Court accepted at sentencing — was that Adelson only joined the conspiracy toward its end. Specifically, the evidence credited by the jury shows that the conspiracy — essentially an accounting fraud — was hatched by various Impath accounting executives and employees who were under strong pressure from the Chief Executive Officer, Anuradha Saad, to maintain the company’s healthy financial results and thereby buttress its “high-flying” status in the securities markets. The fraud was sufficiently sophisticated to fool the company’s outside auditors, and it also fooled Dr. Saad, from whom the Government, after originally charging her with complicity in the fraud, eventually accepted a plea to misappropriating company funds for personal expenses (a misconduct unearthed, ironically, by Adelson). However, as the jury’s split verdict attests, Adelson, who had more financial acumen than Saad, ultimately became aware of the fraud toward its latter stages, but, rather than expose it, chose to conceal it and to participate in its continuation, thus leading to his conviction.

After the fraud was uncovered, the accounting employees who actually designed the fraud entered into cooperation agreements with the Government, in return for which they became eligible for the substantially reduced sentences that they ultimately received. For her misappropriation of funds for personal expenses, Dr. Saad was given a “non-guideline” sentence of 3 months’ imprisonment, which the Government did not appeal.

However, at Adelson’s sentencing, on May 30, 2006, the Government argued that the Sentencing Guidelines, if properly calculated in Adelson’s case, called for a sentence of life imprisonment, cabined only by the maximum of 85 years permitted under the counts of which Adelson was convicted. Short of that, the Government argued, the Court should at least impose a sentence somewhere in the range of 15 to 30 years’ imprisonment. Adelson’s counsel, by contrast, argued that the proper guideline calculation resulted in a guideline range of 21 to 27 months’ imprisonment, and urged that the actual sentence be well below that range. In the end, however, the Court imposed a non-guideline sentence of 42 months imprisonment three-and-a-half years), plus restitution in the amount of $50 million, immediate forfeiture of $1.2 million, three years of supervised release to follow imprisonment, and a life-time ban from being an officer or director of a public company. (Adelson also faces additional monetary sanctions in a parallel pro *508 ceeding brought against him by the S.E.C.).

At the time of sentence, the Court set forth on the record the multiple reasons for its determinations, and those findings and conclusions were subsequently reduced to writing in the form of the 69-page transcript of the proceedings. See transcript, 5/30/06 (“tr.”). Accordingly, when the Court prepared and filed the formal Judgment on June 6, 2006, the Court, after checking the boxes on that form that recite that the Court imposed a non-guideline sentence, see “Judgment Attachment (Page 3),” and that the reasons for the non-guideline sentence relate to “the nature and circumstances of the offense and the history and characteristics of the defendant pursuant to 18 U.S.C. § 3553(a)(1),” id, responded to the directive to “[e]xplain the facts justifying a sentence outside the advisory guideline system” by simply referring back to the transcript of May 30, 2006. Id.

Nine days later, however, on June 15, 2006, the Second Circuit Court of Appeals issued its decision in United States v. Rattoballi, 452 F.3d 127, in which it indicated, albeit in dictum, an intention to strictly enforce the requirement of 18 U.S.C. § 3553(c) that the specific reasons for the imposition of a non-guideline sentence not only must be stated in open court at the time of sentencing, but “must also be stated with specificity in the written order of judgment and commitment ...,” id. at 138. This left in doubt the adequacy of the Court’s simple cross-reference to the sentencing transcript in the Judgment. Although the Court of Appeals, in interpreting an analogous provision of Rule 32, Fed.R.Crim.P., had previously suggested that one way to cure such a problem might be simply to append the sentencing transcript to the Judgment, see United States v. Cortez, 841 F.2d 456 (2d Cir.1988), Rat-toballi leaves such a solution arguably in doubt, and, in any event, given the length of the transcript here, such an approach might not be of much practical value in the instant case.

Accordingly, the Court, sua sponte, undertook to draft this Sentence Memorandum, reiterating and further specifying the reasons for the Adelson sentence, with the notion that the memorandum would be appended to the Judgment in compliance with the thrust of Rattoballi. Unfortunately, although the first draft of this Sentence Memorandum was prepared on June 23, 2006, the press of other business prevented the Court from completing the final draft until today (July 20, 2006). In the interim, on July 5, 2006, the Government filed a Notice of Appeal from the sentence, thereby arguably depriving the Court of jurisdiction to file this Sentence Memorandum as an attachment to the Judgment now on appeal.

However, Second Circuit case law makes clear that such a memorandum may still be filed by the District Court in “aid of the appeal,” see, e.g., United States v. Deutsch, 104 Fed.Appx.

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Bluebook (online)
441 F. Supp. 2d 506, 2006 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 49253, 2006 WL 2008727, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-adelson-nysd-2006.