United States v. Calvin Bein, Thomas Deangelis, Albert Vitti, and Arthur Billups

728 F.2d 107, 14 Fed. R. Serv. 1805, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 25480
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 13, 1984
Docket357, 360, Dockets 83-1141 to 83-1144
StatusPublished
Cited by59 cases

This text of 728 F.2d 107 (United States v. Calvin Bein, Thomas Deangelis, Albert Vitti, and Arthur Billups) 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. Calvin Bein, Thomas Deangelis, Albert Vitti, and Arthur Billups, 728 F.2d 107, 14 Fed. R. Serv. 1805, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 25480 (2d Cir. 1984).

Opinion

WINTER, Circuit Judge:

Appellants Calvin Bein, Thomas DeAn-gelis, Albert Vitti and Arthur Billups were convicted on various counts for wire fraud, mail fraud and conspiracy in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341,1343 and 2 for their participation in a scheme to sell illegal commodity option contracts. Bein was also convicted of selling commodity options in violation of the Commodity Exchange Act as amended, 7 U.S.C. §§ 6c(c) and 13b (1976). 1 We affirm.

BACKGROUND

The convictions before us involve the activities of E-K Capital Corporation (“EKCC”), which was in the business of selling investments in gold and silver. Bein was President of EKCC, DeAngelis was Treasurer, and Robert Enchelmeyer, who testified for the government, was sole shareholder and Secretary. Bein and DeAngelis were responsible for sales and marketing while Enchelmeyer handled certain administrative functions and purchasing. The corporation’s checks, which required the signatures of two of the three officers, were usually signed by Bein and either DeAngelis or Enchelmeyer. EKCC’s business consisted of the sale of “deferred delivery” gold and silver contracts. From an unpartitioned salesroom with desks and telephones, sales personnel hired and trained by Bein and DeAngelis made usually unsolicited phone calls to potential buyers throughout the country. For a nonrefundable transaction fee (known as a “contango” fee) ranging from $1,000 up, the purchaser of an EKCC contract obtained the right to “control” a specified amount of gold or silver for a limited time at a fixed “strike” price set by the market price of the commodity at the time the contract was pur *110 chased. If the price of gold or silver exceeded the strike price at the expiration of the contract, the purchaser could either buy the metal at the strike price or receive the profit in cash from EKCC. If the market price was below the strike price at the date of maturity, the purchaser was not required to execute the contract. In either event, the contango fee was unrecoverable by the purchaser. EKCC represented to customers in brochures and in telephone communications that all contracts would be backed by the company’s inventory of precious metals or by commodity futures contracts. Purchasers were told that their only risk was loss of the nonrefundable contango fee.

Trade was brisk, and EKCC received $2.7 million from investors purchasing such contracts. However, EKCC did not cover most of the contracts. By February, 1980 the company owed $11 million in profits to its customers whose contracts had matured during a rising market. Bein and DeAngel-is planned to defer payments until a hoped for decline in the market by convincing contract holders to roll over profits into new contracts.

Arthur Billups was hired as a salesman in October, 1979, but after January, 1980 his principal duties were to persuade customers to roll over their profits into new contracts. In tape-recorded conversations with customers, Billups made misrepresentations as to his position within EKCC, the extent of his clientele and the nature of the rolled-over investments.

Albert Vitti, a sales manager, had regular contacts with EKCC customers, in which he misrepresented himself as a buyer and as the “head trader.” He sometimes used the alias “John Aren,” and he sought to persuade clients to roll over their profits into new contracts by giving them false information about EKCC’s inventory.

In January, 1980, when Enchelmeyer discovered that $220,000 had been transferred out of EKCC by Bein and DeAngelis, he demanded an audit of EKCC’s books which Bein and DeAngelis refused. Enchelmeyer then transferred $134,000 of EKCC’s funds to a checking account over which he had exclusive control. Enchelmeyer told Bein and DeAngelis that he would not return the funds until they agreed to an audit. Bein stated that EKCC could not withstand an audit and that Enchelmeyer, as sole shareholder, would be left holding the bag and would go to jail. Enchelmeyer responded that he would not go by himself, whereupon DeAngelis attacked and repeatedly punched him, choked him with his necktie and threw a liquor bottle at him, cracking his ribs. Shortly thereafter Enchelmeyer resigned from EKCC. EKCC ceased doing business when its offices were raided on March 20, 1980 by the FBI.

During the grand jury proceedings, Fred Stitt, an accountant, testified about meetings he attended where Bein, DeAngelis and two attorneys discussed the type of business EKCC wanted to do. At those meetings, the attorneys called attention to Commodity Futures Trading Commission v. United States Metals Depository, 468 F.Supp. 1149 (S.D.N.Y.1979), a decision holding that certain “deferred delivery” gold and silver contracts were illegal option contracts. After the meeting, Stitt read the case and, in a discussion with Bein outside the presence of the attorneys, recommended that EKCC not sell option contracts.

At trial, the conversations between Bein and DeAngelis and the attorneys were excluded on attorney-client privilege grounds. Stitt’s conversation with Bein, however, was admitted against both Bein and DeAn-gelis. Also, at trial, the government called an expert witness who gave testimony defining and distinguishing between deferred delivery or futures contracts and commodity option contracts. Bein’s counsel informed the district court that he too intended to call an expert, Ira Cobleigh, to support defendants’ contention that they were selling legal deferred delivery contracts. In early February, Chief Judge Motley informed counsel that she intended to hold court on February 21, President’s Day, if necessary. However, Cobleigh, who was not under subpoena, refused to appear that day because it was a holiday. Since he *111 was the only defense witness and the government had rested its case, defendants requested a stay until February 22. Chief Judge Motley denied the request, calling Cobleigh’s refusal to appear “arbitrary” and indicating that she would instruct the jurors on the distinction between deferred delivery contracts and commodity options, as other courts had previously formulated the distinction.

DISCUSSION

On appeal, appellants raise many claims, five of which merit discussion. 2

1. The Contracts Sold by Bein

Bein contests his conviction on two counts of selling illegal option contracts, 3 maintaining that what he sold were legal deferred delivery or futures contracts.

In commodity futures markets, a deferred delivery or futures contract involves the sale or purchase of specified amounts of a commodity to be delivered in the future. The purchaser of a futures contract makes a down payment and is obligated to take delivery when the contract matures.

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Bluebook (online)
728 F.2d 107, 14 Fed. R. Serv. 1805, 1984 U.S. App. LEXIS 25480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-calvin-bein-thomas-deangelis-albert-vitti-and-arthur-ca2-1984.