United States v. Anthony Barone

39 F.3d 981, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 8421, 94 Daily Journal DAR 15589, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 30539, 1994 WL 597726
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedNovember 3, 1994
Docket93-10415
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 39 F.3d 981 (United States v. Anthony Barone) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Anthony Barone, 39 F.3d 981, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 8421, 94 Daily Journal DAR 15589, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 30539, 1994 WL 597726 (9th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

REINHARDT, Circuit Judge:

Anthony Barone appeals his convictions on one count of conspiracy and nine counts of uttering forged securities. See 18 U.S.C. §§ 371, 2, 513(a). He claims, inter alia, that the government faded to prove the necessary interstate jurisdictional element of the offenses, and that his conduct therefore did not constitute a federal crime. We agree and reverse his convictions.

I.

The facts of this case revolve around a not particularly exciting or imaginative check-bouncing scheme which occurred in the Las Vegas area in December of 1990 and January of 1991, and could easily have been prosecuted in state court. The scheme targeted several businesses, usually casinos, for a few days at a time. The participants in the scheme cashed a number of checks at each targeted business. Although these checks purported to be payroll checks drawn on the *983 accounts of various legitimate businesses, 1 they were in fact drawn on closed accounts or accounts with insufficient funds. Many of the cheeks were falsely signed, and some were falsely endorsed. During the scheme, the participants fraudulently cashed over 130 checks, with values ranging from $200 to $916.84.

On June 30, 1992, a grand jury returned a twelve-count indictment which charged Anthony Barone and 16 others in this scheme. Count 1 charged all of the defendants with conspiracy to make, utter, and possess forged securities in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 513(a). Each of the other counts charged one or more of the defendants with substantive violations of 18 U.S.C. §§ 2 and 513(a). The substantive counts were organized by victim: Count 3 alleged that the defendants uttered 15 forged checks at the Golden Gate Hotel, Count 4 alleged that the defendants uttered 39 forged checks at the Horseshoe Hotel, and so forth. The indictment charged Barone in every count except Counts 9 and 10.

All of Barone’s co-defendants entered into plea agreements. Barone, however, went to trial. At trial, the government sought to prove the existence of the check-bouncing scheme, and Barone’s central role in it, by several means. Bank representatives testified regarding the dates on which the various checking accounts were opened and closed. Representatives of the several victim businesses provided the cancelled checks which they had cashed and which later bounced. Several of these individuals stated that their companies operated in interstate commerce. Eight of Barone’s co-defendants testified. They stated that Barone organized and supervised the scheme, and that he distributed the forged checks to the other participants through a man named Kimble Edmounds (who was actually co-defendant Robb Benns). Darren Miller, an acquaintance of Barone’s but not a co-defendant, testified that he had seen Barone practicing various signatures on a computer. (Barone’s then-wife, also a co-defendant, provided similar, although less detailed, testimony on that point). The government also introduced the testimony of a handwriting expert, who stated that it was probable that Barone signed 37 of 56 checks with handwritten signatures. (Many of the checks in the scheme had been signed by computer).

In his defense, Barone claimed that the checks used in the scheme were leftover cheeks from the accounts of his legitimate businesses, and that these checks had been stolen from his garage shortly before the numerous check-bouncing incidents. Barone also sought to challenge the credibility of his co-defendants who had entered into plea agreements. He focused particular attention on Edmounds, who had provided the law enforcement authorities with information about the check-bouncing scheme. Barone claimed that Edmounds had set him up and was carrying out a vendetta against him because Edmounds blamed him for a prior drug conviction. (In his testimony before the grand jury, Edmounds stated that he became an informant “[bjecause Tony sent me to prison for two and a half years.” At trial, Edmounds denied feeling any resentment towards Barone.).

The jurors deliberated less than six hours before returning a verdict. They found Bar-one guilty on all ten counts, and the court sentenced him to 71 months on each of them. The sentences were to run concurrently with each other, and consecutively to a sentence Barone is currently serving in state prison. The district court entered a formal judgment on June 30,1993, and Barone filed a notice of appeal on the same day.

II.

Under 18 U.S.C. § 513(a), it is a federal offense to make, utter, or possess, with the intent to deceive, a forged security of an organization. For purposes of this statute, an “organization” is “a legal'entity, other than a government, ... which operates in or the activities of which affect interstate *984 or foreign commerce.” 18 U.S.C. § 513(e)(4). 2 Barone argues that the government failed to satisfy this jurisdictional requirement. He contends that the forged checks were securities only of nonexistent shell companies, and that these companies necessarily had no effect on interstate commerce. 3 We agree. Although the government might conceivably have been able to prove the requisite jurisdictional element in other ways, it utterly faded to do so. Accordingly, we must reverse and remand with instructions to dismiss for lack of federal jurisdiction. 4

To prove the necessary jurisdictional element of the securities forgery offenses, the government relied on two theories at trial: First, it claimed that the shell companies on whose accounts the checks were drawn were themselves “organizations” affecting commerce, and that the cheeks were securities of these organizations. The government asserted that the shell companies affected interstate commerce for purposes of the securities forgery statute simply because some victims of the scheme operated in interstate commerce. Second, the government contended that the defendants had travelled interstate and purchased goods that had crossed state lines as part of their scheme.

We find the government’s jurisdictional theories inadequate as a matter of law. Under a straightforward interpretation of § 513, a non-existent shell company does not constitute an “organization” when its only effect on interstate commerce results from the passage of its forged securities to a victim which operates in interstate commerce. As Barone persuasively argues, a contrary construction would render meaningless Congress’s decision to restrict § 513 to cases in which the entity whose securities are forged itself operates in or affects interstate commerce.

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39 F.3d 981, 94 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 8421, 94 Daily Journal DAR 15589, 1994 U.S. App. LEXIS 30539, 1994 WL 597726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-anthony-barone-ca9-1994.