United States v. Charles L. Johnson

622 F.2d 507
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedJuly 18, 1980
Docket79-1132
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 622 F.2d 507 (United States v. Charles L. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth 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. Charles L. Johnson, 622 F.2d 507 (10th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

MILLER, Judge.

Appellant was convicted by a jury on five counts of mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1341. The district court sentenced him to a term of five years’ imprisonment on each of counts I and II, to run concurrently; five years on count III, to run consecutively; four years on count IV, to run concurrently with count III; and five years on count V, to run concurrently with the previous counts. 1 The co-defendant, Charles Bazarian, pled nolo contendere to counts I and IV and was sentenced to four years’ imprisonment, which was suspended, fined, and ordered to make restitution of $60,000. We affirm.

In brief, count I charged that appellant and Bazarian, along with four other individuals, devised a scheme lasting from February to September of 1977 to defraud persons seeking hospital and medical benefits by inducing them, in the name of “United Health and Retirement Association” (UHARA), to pay dues and contributions to an alleged plan under which members and their beneficiaries would receive benefits (with a life-time maximum of one million dollars) in event of sickness, accident, disability, retirement, death, or other interruption of earnings, without the intent and capability of performance and knowing that such representations regarding the plan were false; that no benefits were ever consummated and no monies were ever placed in trust or reserves for the payment of claims notwithstanding that in excess of $253,146 in membership fees and contributions was received from members of UHARA, which monies were distributed to appellant and Bazarian or others at their direction; and that over 200,000 pieces of mail were sent through the Postal Service to various persons in several states for the purpose of inducing them to join UHARA. Each of the remaining counts charged substantially the same offense, but also specified a particular individual who was allegedly defrauded.

BACKGROUND

When viewed in the light most favorable to the government 2 the evidence shows the following:

The first meeting out of which grew the UHARA operation took place in early January of 1977 in Kansas City, Missouri, between appellant, who was from Austin, Texas, an insurance businessman named Jack Amason from Dallas, Texas, a Kansas City lawyer named Chris Mentrup, who was appellant’s lawyer, and Bazarian, who had worked for appellant with a company called United Trust Co. and whom appellant had called to come up from Florida on his return trip to Oklahoma City, where he had an insurance agency, Central Management Systems (CMS). Amason had formerly *509 worked for appellant in the insurance business. They discussed establishment of a self-funded health plan through an association under a recent act of Congress, Employee Retirement Income Security Act (ERISA), and signed an agreement drawn by Mentrup under which Bazarian would be paid a sixty percent commission to produce the business. On January 17 of 1977, a second meeting was held in Dallas, Texas, involving appellant, Amason, Mentrup, Gene Hawkins, an actuary, Jim Lane, a lawyer, and Bob King, an insurance executive. A brochure was designed by appellant and Amason, with the assistance of the others, to market the plan under the name of “National Health Association,” later changed to “United Health and Retirement Association.” It advertised coverage by the plan of various hospital and medical doctor expenses, with a lifetime maximum benefit of one million dollars. The brochure was first printed in Austin by a printer selected by appellant, but after running out of copies, appellant sent the negatives to Oklahoma City where a lower bid had been received. Over 230,000 mailings were sent out through the Delong Mailing Service of Oklahoma City, with billing therefor to CMS. Each mailing included a “flyer” designed by Bazarian and a card to be returned to UHARA if the recipient was interested in receiving information about the UHARA plan, and a call by a salesman would result if interest was indicated. Shortly afterwards, Amason advised that he did not wish to be further involved. In February, appellant, Mentrup, and Bazarian met in Kansas City. Bazarian’s mother-in-law, who worked for CMS, was appointed plan administrator, and two of his brothers-in-law were appointed plan trustees. Handling of monies was agreed upon (and subsequently carried out) as follows:

Each $30 membership fee: divided equally among appellant, Bazarian and Mentrup. Contributions to the plan: 15% retained in the UHARA bank account for salaries and expenses; 85% transferred to C. L. Johnson Agency Account,M from which 15% was sent to appellant about once a week (totaling $24,000 for the period Feb. 11 to June 3, 1977), “because it was his deal”; the remaining 70% transferred to the CMS account, with 50% going to salesmen for commissions and 20% for salaries, phones, rent, and mailing of brochures. The various bank accounts were in Oklahoma City.

A plan description, dated April 13, 1977, was filed by Bazarian’s mother-in-law, as plan administrator, with the U.S. Department of Labor, which had administrative authority over ERISA. The filing indicated that the address of UHARA was the National Press Building, Washington, D.C., and that the date of the plan was March 15, 1977. The Washington, D.C., address was, in actuality, merely a mail drop with a phone answering service, and UHARA’s operations were conducted out of the CMS offices in Oklahoma City to which mail received at the Washington, D.C., address was forwarded.

As of June 3, 1977, over 700 members were enrolled in the UHARA plan from several states; deposits of fees and contributions amounted to over $347,000, but only $1,638.75 remained in the UHARA account. No fund was established for payment of claims, although Hawkins, the actuary, had recommended that a reserve of 20% of the contributions be set aside under such a plan for claims in the first year; and claims received before appellant’s indictment totaled in excess of $61,000, 3 4 but were not paid because there was no money to pay them.

Bazarian testified that, for all practical purposes, he and appellant were the “principals” in the scheme. Although appellant lived in Austin, Texas, he came to Oklaho *510 ma twice between January and June in regard to the UHARA operations, and he and Bazarian talked by telephone once a day or every other day about how the salesmen were doing and what areas they were working in. Bazarian was in charge of the salesmen and made the decisions on “day to day operations,” but “basic problems” were discussed with appellant.

The plan administrator testified that appellant called her the first part of July of 1977 to find out why his check was late and that she told him—

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776 F.2d 1451 (Tenth Circuit, 1985)

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Bluebook (online)
622 F.2d 507, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-charles-l-johnson-ca10-1980.