United States v. Bradley

513 F. Supp. 2d 1371, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36194, 2007 WL 1464058
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Georgia
DecidedMay 17, 2007
Docket405CR059
StatusPublished

This text of 513 F. Supp. 2d 1371 (United States v. Bradley) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Georgia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Bradley, 513 F. Supp. 2d 1371, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36194, 2007 WL 1464058 (S.D. Ga. 2007).

Opinion

ORDER

B. AVANT EDENFIELD, District Judge.

I. INTRODUCTION

In this criminal RICO case, the Court is asked to stay, pending appeal, the liquidation of various properties part-owned by defendants convicted and sentenced to some $70 million in fines, assessments, forfeitures and restitution. The wives of two defendants claim ownership interests in some real property. One argues that the Government should wait to collect until her husband’s appeal is exhausted. See doc. # 908. The other insists that enough funds have already been (or are about to be) collected, thus obviating the need for further collection efforts. Doc. # 902 at 2 (sealed brief). And, she questions the Court’s jurisdiction to act in light of pending appeals of this Court’s prior Orders (one of which extended the Receivership’s authority to continue liquidation). Doc. #928.

II. BACKGROUND

A. Forfeiture and Receivership

This case arises from a prescription-drug-based fraud scheme. Doc. # 1; # 106 at 2. A jury convicted one corporate and three individual defendants; Bio-Med Plus, Inc. (BioMed), Martin J. Bradley, Jr., Martin J. Bradley, III, and Albert Telle-chea. Doc. ## 738-41. Contemporaneous with the jury’s 3/29/06 guilty verdict, the parties (except Tellechea) entered into a 4/3/06 Preliminary Consent Order of Forfeiture (doc. # 598) (Preliminary Forfeiture Order) and Order Appointing Receiver and Monitor (doc. # 599) (Receivership Order), under which they agreed to forfeit $39,500,000 to the Government, with the amount forfeited to be credited toward any restitution ordered by the Court at sentencing. Doc. # 598 at 3. The forfeiture judgment was “to be satisfied within one year from the [4/3/06] date of the [Preliminary Forfeiture Order] and the forfeiture judgment [would] not accumulate interest.” Doc. # 598 at 3. These Consent Orders did not specify which defendant should pay what percentage of that $39.5 million. Nor did they identify any particular payment sequence (e.g., from liquidated Bio-Med assets first, then from the individual defendants). Doc. # # 598, 599.

Nor — quite understandably- — did those Orders contain anything that might be construed to interfere with this Court’s authority to sentence the defendants. Doc. # 598 at 1-6; see also doc. # 926, exh. A at 5-6 (defense counsel’s acknowledgment of this fact).

The Consent Order defendants (hence, the “Forfeiture Defendants” — the Brad-leys and Bio-Med) also agreed to the Court’s appointment of a Receiver and Monitor to liquidate various assets (the largest being “certain portions of’ Bio-Med) in order to satisfy the $39.5 million *1373 preliminary forfeiture judgment. Doc. # 599 at 1.

The Receivership Order authorized the Receiver to liquidate a variety of assets “without further order of the Court.” Doc. # 599 at 11. In exchange for resolving the forfeiture issue without trial, the Bradleys received a carve-out of various listed assets that would be exempt from the Receiver’s plenary liquidation power (basically, property in which the Bradley wives claimed an interest, see id. at 11-13; see also doc. # 926, exh. A (Sentencing Tr.) at 17-18); doc. # 598 at 4 (Bio-Med’s receivables and inventory liquidation carve-out for the wives). 1

The Forfeiture Defendants also expressly agreed that (a) they would be jointly and severally liable on their individual forfeiture judgments, doc. # 598 at 2; and (b) “[t]he Receiver shall work with Defendants and other [Bio-Med] owners in order to establish a liquidation schedule which the Receiver and Monitor shall share with the Court, Counsel for the Defendants and government.” Doc. # 598 at 3.

The Government could also, in addition to the $39.5 million forfeiture agreed upon, seize any assets later discovered that had not been disclosed during the negotiations leading up to the Receiver-appointment Order. Doc. #599 at 13. The Bradley wives signed both jointly-presented Preliminary Forfeiture and Receivership Orders. Id. at 17; # 598 at 7.

In anticipation of sentencing, the Government moved to extend the Receiver’s involvement post-judgment. Doc. # 730. It thus sought to use the Receiver and Monitor to collect not only the $39.5 million in forfeiture covered by the Preliminary Forfeiture Order, but also the monetary penalties (fines/assessments/restitution) imposed by this Court at sentencing. Id. Bradley, Jr., joined by Norma, objected. Doc. ## 759, 761.

B. Sentencing the Defendants

The Court sentenced the defendants before ruling on the Government’s extension motion. It incorporated the Preliminary Forfeiture Order into its sentencing judgment. Doc. # 926, exh. A at 44. It also imposed fines and assessments against the Bradleys, who are Bio-Med’s principal owners, Bio-Med, and Telleehea. Doc. #740 at 9 (against Bradley III: a $5 million fine and a $24,700 assessment); # 739 at 6, 8 (against Bradley, Jr: a $1.5 million fíne and a $400 assessment); # 741 at 5-7 (against BioMed: a $26.5 million fine and a $21,200 assessment); # 738 at 5 (against Telleehea: a $100,000 fine and a $100 assessment). In addition, the Court found restitution owing to the following entities in the following amounts:

• Florida Medicaid: $10,120,403.04 ($7,776,722.04 from what became known at trial as the “Florida Medicaid” scheme, plus $2,343,681 from the “IV Solutions” scheme);
• California Department of Health Services: $2,261,366.50;
• The Genetically Handicapped Persons Program: $ 10,423,486.33;
• Chico, California Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services: $2,738,373.50;
• South Counties Employees/Employer Trust: $ 1,908,028.00; and
• Blue Shield California: $353,338.50.

The Court thus ordered total restitution of $27,804,995.89. It found that Bradley III and Bio-Med owed restitution to all of *1374 the above (hence, $27,804,995.89). Doc. # 741 at 5-6 (Bio-Med restitution accounting); doc. # 740 at 7-8 (Bradley III restitution accounting). It also found that Bradley, Jr. owed restitution for all of the above except the “IV Solutions” scheme portion of Florida Medicaid’s restitution. Doc. # 739 at 6-7 (total restitution $25,461,314.89, which equals the total restitution amount minus the “IV Solutions” scheme amount [$27,804,995.89— $2,343,681.00 = $25,461,314.89]). Finally, the Court found that Tellechea owed restitution for only a portion of the “Florida Medicaid” scheme — $3,294,077.00. Doc. # 738 at 5.

The total, “joint and several” restitution 2 award equals $27,804,995.89. The Preliminary Forfeiture Order states, as noted above, “that any amount tendered and forfeited shall be credited to the defendants as restitution.” Doc. # 598 at 3.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
513 F. Supp. 2d 1371, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 36194, 2007 WL 1464058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-bradley-gasd-2007.