United States v. Arnold Nelson Mahler and Dean H. Ubben

579 F.2d 730, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 10491
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedJune 26, 1978
Docket912, 960, Dockets 77-1484, 78-1048
StatusPublished
Cited by66 cases

This text of 579 F.2d 730 (United States v. Arnold Nelson Mahler and Dean H. Ubben) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second 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. Arnold Nelson Mahler and Dean H. Ubben, 579 F.2d 730, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 10491 (2d Cir. 1978).

Opinion

OAKES, Circuit Judge:

Appellants Arnold Nelson Mahler and Dean H. Ubben appeal from their Convictions by a jury following a trial in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York, Milton Pollack, Judge. Their earlier seven-week trial before Judge Marvin E. Frankel ended in a mistrial when one of the jurors suffered a heart attack during the deliberations. On the retrial approximately five months later on a superseding indictment which narrowed and simplified the original charges, 1 Mahler and Ubben were convicted on all counts. 2 We affirm.

I. Facts

In the summer of 1972, Mahler and an associate named Zucker 3 acquired control, in nominee form, of a publicly-tradeable but defunct corporation, Bell-Ko Film Corp., a shell with assets of $86. Ubben had meanwhile been retained as a consultant to International Industries, Inc. (International), a small private company in Colorado. International was the manufacturer of a purportedly revolutionary pneumatic industrial pump; the company was, however, virtually without sales and verging on bankruptcy.

In October of 1972 Mahler and Ubben agreed to reorganize these companies into a new corporation, Industries International Inc. (Industries), for the purpose of fraudulently manipulating the price of the company’s publicly tradeable stock. Ubben and Mahler held the greater part of that stock in nominee name. Once the trading price rose Ubben and Mahler planned to dispose of their worthless stock at a substantial profit.

The fraudulent scheme was carried out by a series of questionable and often illegal *732 acts. Ubben first induced International’s president, Billy Lovejoy, 4 to fire its outside accountants whose annual report would show a loss for the year ending September 30, 1972, and a net worth approaching zero, and to substitute Lawrence V. Bialek 5 whom Ubben described as an accountant who “for $500” would “put anything into a statement . . . Trial Transcript 726-27. Bialek soon produced a false financial statement showing a profit and a substantial net worth on the part of International as well as a pro forma financial statement fraudulently showing the reorganization of International and Bell-Ko into Industries as creating a company with a net worth of no less than $456,278.

To effect the reorganization, Mahler had his attorney, Harold C. Herman, 6 charter Industries as a new corporation, and cause it to issue 4 million shares of stock; 2.2 million of these were exchanged, on a 100 for 1 basis, for the existing 22,000 shares of International controlled by Billy Lovejoy. The remaining 1.8 million shares were for the most part controlled by Mahler, Ubben and Zucker under various nominee names, 7 some of the nominees’ names being used despite their refusal to participate in the scheme.

Mahler then caused Industries to acquire the “assets” of Bell-Ko by exchanging 664,-000 of Industries’ shares for the 664,000 shares of Bell-Ko in a manner which ostensibly complied with SEC Rule 133,17 C.F.R. § 230.133 (repealed effective January 1, 1973), 8 but which in fact fell outside of that Rule since, inter alia, the reorganization was intended simply as a step toward the sale of the surviving company’s stock to the public.

Ubben then sought to stimulate a demand for Industries stock. He first persuaded a number of investors, commencing with the most prominent, from Des Moines, Iowa, to purchase several hundred thousand shares of Industries stock at $1 per share by publishing a false newsletter which grossly inflated the company’s prospects primarily by touting fictitious qualities of the company’s pump. Ubben falsely represented that the proceeds of the sales of stock would be used for production expenses. In actuality, some of the proceeds were used to stave off immediate bankruptcy while at least 45% of them were funneled to Ubben, Mahler and their accomplices. And Ubben promised that one of each of three shares purchased would be unrestricted, “free and tradeable” stock which could be resold once public trading began. This representation was fraudulent since Ubben had no such shares; he only had an illegal plan to turn Bell-Ko shares into free and tradeabale shares for *733 these investors. With all this bait, Ubben was able to attract the fish in Des Moines before public trading had even begun.

In the meantime, Mahler and Ubben bribed a New York stock broker, William Wellens, 9 to induce his firm to make a market in Industries stock. To lure other brokers into the market, a “two-martini” meeting for over-the-counter brokers was held in Manhattan. At the meeting — complete with tape-and-slide show (“offering revolutionary products to a waiting world”) — the proxy statement with Bialek’s false financial statements and an updated financial statement with even “better” figures appearing under the letterhead of a Denver firm which had not prepared the finan-cials 10 was distributed. Ubben and Love-joy also made numerous gross misrepresentations of the firm’s prospects. The next day Wellens had his brokerage firm list Industries in the national daily quotations— the “pink sheets” furnished to over-the-counter brokers.

When trading opened on February 28, 1973, Industries stock traded at $1 per share. But since the demand generated in Des Moines could only be met through the limited supply of Rule 133 stock, Mahler and Ubben were able to manipulate the trading price so that it soon climbed to nearly $5 per share. Ubben and Zucker then sold at least 80,000 shares. The restrictive legend on the shares had been removed when Harold Herman prepared opinion letters based on false representations by Mahler directing the transfer agent to remove the legend. The appellants were seeking to “free up” another 180,000 shares by forged opinion letters and phony representations falsely attributed to six of their nominees when the transfer agent balked; an SEC investigation • had become public knowledge.

On March 27, 1973, after the stock had reached nearly $7 per share, the SEC suspended trading. Soon thereafter, the company filed for bankruptcy. While Ubben and Mahler engaged in numerous other misrepresentations and acts, including a scheme to conceal their fraud, which involved backdating some and destroying other documents, rigging a postage meter and perjury, the foregoing sketch of the facts suffices to impart some the flavor of this “shellgame” securities fraud. We turn then to the legal points raised by Mahler and Ubben.

II. Discussion

A. Rule 609(b)

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579 F.2d 730, 1978 U.S. App. LEXIS 10491, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-arnold-nelson-mahler-and-dean-h-ubben-ca2-1978.