United States v. Benjamin Kramer

25 F.4th 509
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedFebruary 7, 2022
Docket20-3458
StatusPublished

This text of 25 F.4th 509 (United States v. Benjamin Kramer) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. Benjamin Kramer, 25 F.4th 509 (7th Cir. 2022).

Opinion

In the

United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit ____________________ No. 20‐3458 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff‐Appellee, v.

BENJAMIN BARRY KRAMER, Defendant‐Appellant. ____________________

Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois. No. 4:87‐cr‐40070 — J. Phil Gilbert, Judge. ____________________

ARGUED OCTOBER 1, 2021 — DECIDED FEBRUARY 7, 2022 ____________________

Before EASTERBROOK, MANION, and WOOD, Circuit Judges. MANION, Circuit Judge. Before he ended up in prison, Ben‐ jamin Barry Kramer led an adventurous life. Not only was he once the U.S. open class offshore powerboat champion, he was also a successful drug lord and money launderer who made millions smuggling vast quantities of marijuana. His daring persisted even after his arrest when he tried to escape 2 No. 20‐3458

prison hanging off the skids of a helicopter.1 He was convicted in the Southern District of Illinois for drug and criminal en‐ terprise offenses and in the Southern District of Florida for racketeering, and $60 million and $50 million forfeiture judg‐ ments were entered against him, respectively, as part of his sentences.2 Over a decade later, Kramer filed a motion for an accounting in the Southern District of Illinois of the amounts collected by the government to satisfy his $60 million forfei‐ ture judgment. The district court granted the motion but, given the complexity of his case, limited the accounting to what was collected in the Southern District of Illinois toward that judgment. On appeal, Kramer argues that the district court should not have credited to his judgment the amounts forfeited un‐ der a 2003 settlement agreement. He also claims that the dis‐ trict court abused its discretion in limiting the accounting only to the amounts that were collected in the Southern Dis‐ trict of Illinois. We disagree and affirm the district court’s judgment. In the 1980s, Kramer and his associates oversaw a nation‐ wide drug smuggling operation. The venture was lucrative, generating about $180 million in profits. To keep their ill‐got‐ ten gain, they sought the help of Sam Gilbert, who devised an elaborate international money laundering scheme. As

1 Maya Bell and Sentinel Miami Bureau, Drug Kingpin Hurt in Copter Escape Crash, Orlando Sentinel, April 18, 1989, https://www.orlandosenti‐ nel.com/news/os‐xpm‐1989‐04‐18‐8904180060‐story.html. 2 The Eleventh Circuit later questioned whether the district court properly imposed a RICO forfeiture judgment against Kramer. United States v. Gilbert, 244 F.3d 888, 897 (11th Cir. 2001). That court’s decision, however, has no effect on how we resolve this case. No. 20‐3458 3

relevant to this appeal, Kramer and his partners loaned $12.6 million of their drug profits to LCP, a business partnership complicit in the scheme, to partly finance the construction of the Bicycle Club, a card club, through which to launder the rest of their money. Kramer and his cohorts left their names off the books for obvious reasons. Regardless, the government eventually caught up with all involved. Kramer was charged and convicted under the Controlled Substances Act (CSA) and Continuing Criminal Enterprise Act in the Southern District of Illinois, and under the Racket‐ eer Influenced and Corrupt Organizations Act (RICO) in the Southern District of Florida. The Illinois district court sen‐ tenced him to life imprisonment without possibility of parole and entered a $60 million forfeiture judgment against him un‐ der the CSA, while the Florida district court entered a $50 mil‐ lion forfeiture judgment against him under RICO. As part of its effort to satisfy these judgments, the govern‐ ment brought forfeiture proceedings in various jurisdictions to acquire property from owners of LCP connected to the $12.6 million criminal loan. The government negotiated set‐ tlement agreements with all relevant owners except the so‐ called Gilbert entities, a collection of family members and an irrevocable trust connected to Sam Gilbert. At a certain point during the money‐laundering scheme, the Gilbert entities had purchased shareholder interests in LCP and even bought out Kramer’s interest by refinancing the original drug loan through a legitimate financial institution. Kramer did not have a legal basis to prevent this because he did not have an official ownership interest. The government brought forfeiture proceedings against the Gilbert entities in the Southern District of Illinois to satisfy 4 No. 20‐3458

Kramer’s $60 million CSA forfeiture judgment. They negoti‐ ated a settlement agreement, according to which the Gilbert entities ceded a percentage of the profit distributions of the Bicycle Club that existed at the time it was seized by the gov‐ ernment, plus interest accrued (less a specified amount). The district court approved it and issued an order of forfeiture in 2003. Kramer did not appeal the district court’s judgment or otherwise object to the settlement agreement’s terms, though he was a party to the proceedings and had notice.3 Over a decade later, Kramer filed an amended 11‐count civil complaint in the Southern District of Illinois in a bid to reacquire property that he argued the government was hold‐ ing in excess of his CSA forfeiture judgment. Under several theories, he asked the district court (1) to find the 2003 settle‐ ment agreement invalid and (2) to account for all property seized by the government and return to him the value exceed‐ ing $60 million. In several orders, the district court dismissed all counts, save one. Kramer did not appeal any of those or‐ ders. The only matter that the district court did not ultimately dismiss was Kramer’s request for an accounting of the amounts forfeited to the federal government and a return of the amount exceeding $60 million. The district court con‐ strued that count as a motion for an accounting of the amounts collected on his CSA forfeiture judgment, filed it in Kramer’s pre‐existing criminal docket, and granted it.4 (The

3 The criminal docket confirms that the district court issued a Notice of Forfeiture on October 2, 2003, and that the notice was sent to Kramer via service on his then‐counsel of record. 4Kramer argues that, because the district court refiled his eleven‐ count complaint in his criminal docket, the judgments entered in the civil No. 20‐3458 5

district court dismissed the claim for return of property in the civil docket and informed Kramer that he could refile that claim after the results of the motion for an accounting—Kra‐ mer did not appeal that judgment.) Given the sheer complex‐ ity and the number of forfeiture proceedings initiated to se‐ cure property associated with Kramer and his cohorts’ drug empire, the district court limited its accounting to forfeitures conducted in the Southern District of Illinois to satisfy the CSA forfeiture judgment entered against him. The district court determined in a December 2020 order, from which Kramer appeals, that approximately $2 million (the “settlement amount”) had been forfeited under the 2003 settlement agreement between the government and the Gil‐ bert entities. The district court credited the settlement amount toward Kramer’s CSA forfeiture judgment.5 Kramer disputes this accounting. On appeal, Kramer first challenges the accuracy of the dis‐ trict court’s accounting by attacking the 2003 settlement agreement. He contends that the settlement agreement erro‐ neously characterized the settlement amount as “substitute property” under 21 U.S.C. § 853(p), arguing that any property that is directly forfeitable cannot count as substitute property.

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