United States v. Citrin

58 F. Supp. 766, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2608
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedFebruary 7, 1945
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 58 F. Supp. 766 (United States v. Citrin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Citrin, 58 F. Supp. 766, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2608 (S.D.N.Y. 1945).

Opinion

HARRY E. WATKINS, District Judge.

The indictment in this case charges Sam Elkin, Wilfred E. Cohen and Philip Citrin with use of the mails for the purpose of executing a scheme to defraud, in violation of Section 215 of the Criminal Code, 18 U.S.C.A.§ 338. Elkin was tried on another mail fraud indictment, was convicted, but committed suicide before sentence was pronounced. Cohen has pleaded guilty to this indictment, leaving only Citrin for trial. At Citrin’s request, and by stipulation of all parties in writing, the case was tried by the court in lieu of a jury.

The scheme alleged in the indictment was. that Citrin would open a checking account at the First National Bank of In-wood, Long Island, and that Citrin would later open a second account under the fictitious name of Harry Dresden, and that Citrin, Elkin and later Cohen would defraud J. L. Stulsaft and others by manipulating a check kiting scheme with these bank accounts whereby worthless checks for large sums of money would be given with a representation that there were sufficient funds in the account to meet and pay such checks, whereas actually there was no such money; that it took about three days for such worthless checks, negotiated in Manhattan, New York, to clear through the Federal Reserve Bank and reach the In-wood bank for payment, during which interim of three days another similar worthless check in an increasing amount would be cashed and the money deposited to cover the previously issued worthless check; and that it was the plan and purpose of the defendants by this continuing scheme of kiting to ultimately defraud Stulsaft and others who received such worthless checks and to convert and appropriate their money to the use of defendants.

The indictment further alleges Elkin would falsely represent to such victims that he desired to obtain funds for certain persons in the paint business who wished to borrow money and would pay large bonuses for cash loans for short periods; that these borrowers, who were actually fictitious accounts, preferred to receive cash and to repay in cash; that Citrin was his assistant and made the collections, and that he, Elkin, was using the account of Citrin in the Inwood bank for the purpose of making repayments to those who loaned money to these borrowers; that worthless checks of Citrin would then be given upon the false representation that such checks were repayments of principal and interest by such fictitious borrowers.

Citrin admits that the evidence clearly shows that his friend, Elkin, had devised a scheme to defraud, exactly as charged in the indictment, and that such scheme was so cleverly manipulated that it fooled everyone. His defense is that he, too, was a victim of Elkin, believing Elkin to be a great financial wizard, and thoroughly honest, and that he, Citrin, had no intent to defraud anyone and no guilty knowledge of Elkin’s scheme to defraud.

The evidence shows that the scheme included representations to victims that great profits could be made by advancing money for short term loans to various clients of Elkin. There were about ten such fictitious accounts presented to Stulsaft, a personal acquaintance of Elkin, and about the same number to Lecturn Service Company, a financing company, whose officers were persuaded by Elkin to invest money in the financing business.

From June, 1942, until May, 1943, the victims advanced money to Elkin payable to the order of dummy third parties, believing the money was being loaned to real parties. These loans were made in slowly but ever increasing amounts. Accompanied by Citrin, Elkin would frequently make part payment or full payment of principal and interest to the victims on alleged prior loans in the form of checks to the order of the victims signed by Citrin on the Inwood account. In this manner the deception [768]*768continued through the medium of Citrin and Dresden checks in alleged repayment of these fictitious loans until finally in May, 1943, the scheme exploded and each victim was caught with many worthless checks and left to suffer the loss. At that time Stulsaft held approximately $28,700 in worthless Citrin checks and Lecturn Service Company was left with an open balance of approximately $41,000 on the fictitious accounts which by that time were all merged under the name of Citrin.

While this scheme was in progress the defendant Cohen was engaged in another separate scheme with Elkin involving the forging and sending through the mails of letters purporting to come from the Treasury Department showing that large sums of money were owing to a corporation owned by Cohen. Also Cohen was engaged in a separate check kiting scheme of his own. By December of 1942, it became advantageous to both Cohen and Elkin to exchange worthless checks. And thus Cohen used many worthless Citrin and Dresden checks for his own kiting purposes and Elkin used the proceeds of many worthless Cohen checks to deposit in the Citrin account at Inwood, thereby joining the fraudulent scheme alleged in this indictment, to which he has pleaded gnilty.

Neither Elkin, Cohen, nor Citrin had any money of their own in any of these bank accounts. By this continuing manipulation about one and one-half million dollars in checks cleared through the Citrin account in the Inwood bank in less than one year, although the average daily balance in this account (calculated on the days the account was active) was less than $400. The average daily clearance of checks, calculated in the same manner, was about $4,000. Citrin does not deny that he signed all these checks, but says that he did so at the request of Elkin, in whom he had the utmost confidence, not knowing of any scheme to defraud. The further sum of $175,000 cleared through the Dresden account in the same bank, although the average daily balance in that account on the days the account was active was only about $200. The mails were used daily in the execution of the scheme because the In-wood bank is a suburban bank which cleared its checks through the Federal Reserve System by mail. Every single false and fraudulent check issued by Citrin and Elkin to Stulsaft and Lecturn, after deposit by the latter in their own banks in New York, cleared to the home bank by mail.

Stulsaft was a typical victim. He was a successful business man engaged in the plumbing supply business with a daily checking account of about $15,000. He had never before loaned money for a fee. He was recommended to Elkin by an official of his own bank. Elkin had carefully laid the foundation for his fraud by promptly paying to Stulsaft an obligation of a friend upon which he was only orally liable. Elkin explained that if he had some money which was not in use, he could make some quick money. Stulsaft gave Elkin a check for $2200, the proceeds to be loaned to an unknown client of Elkin. One day later the principal was returned to Stulsaft with a profit of $33.31. One week later Stulsaft made another loan of $2900, and at the request of Elkin, made the check payable to Philip ■ Citrin, who was represented to be a customer and a very good account. Thereafter many more checks were issued to Citrin in slowly increasing amounts, and purported repayment was made by Citrin checks on the Inwood bank. All the while Stulsaft thought he was making large profits, whereas, in fact, his ever increasing loans were being repaid with his own money. Frequently he would be asked to hold a Citrin check for a specified time until Elkin could get more money from him, which would be deposited by Citrin to meet the prior check. Sometimes checks were made by Stulsaft to fictitious persons, the checks cashed and the proceeds deposited by Citrin in his Inwood account.

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Bluebook (online)
58 F. Supp. 766, 1945 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2608, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-citrin-nysd-1945.