United States v. Costin

59 F. App'x 726
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedMarch 5, 2003
DocketNos. 00-3287, 00-3288, 00-3289
StatusPublished

This text of 59 F. App'x 726 (United States v. Costin) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Costin, 59 F. App'x 726 (6th Cir. 2003).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The United States appeals the district court’s grant of a new trial to Darryl J. Costin after the jury convicted him of two counts of filing false tax returns. Costin cross-appeals the district court’s order refusing to dismiss those two counts on the basis of the Double Jeopardy Clause. For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the district court’s orders.

I

The appeal and cross-appeal in this case present two relatively discrete legal issues, which are products of a lengthy and complicated federal criminal prosecution. In 1995, the government obtained a 313-count indictment against Costin, Ronald Skeddle, see United States v. Skeddle, No. 00-3195, 45 Fed.Appx. 443, 2002 WL 2026537 (6th Cir. Aug. 29, 2002), and six other co-defendants. After pre-trial motions, Costin. Skeddle, and their co-defendants were tried on slightly over 200 counts, which included mail and wire fraud, conspiracy, and money laundering. These charges were all directed at a transaction between Libbey-Owens-Ford Company (“LOF”), of which Costin and Skeddle were executives, and Computer Technoloy Management (“CTM”), a computer services company that Costin and Skeddle established. LOF contracted with CTM for computer consulting work.

CTM was itself a complicated entity. It was wholly owned by three corporations, operated by Professor Clarence Martin, a computer scientist and friend of Costin and Skeddle. These three corporations were known as the Martin Companies. [728]*728Each of three companies, CJD (owned and operated by Costin), SWR (operated by Skeddle), and BBE (owned and operated by Edward Bryant, another LOF executive), wholly owned one of the three Martin Companies respectively. SWR was formally owned by Skeddle’s young children.

The indictment alleged that this elaborate configuration of corporations was designed to conceal self-dealing of LOF business to the three LOF executives and to embezzle money from LOF through payments to CTM for phantom computer-consulting services. After an extensive jury trial, the jury acquitted all of the defendants of all counts.

Coming up empty on the first prosecution, government prosecutors referred Costin, Skeddle, and Robert Hobe, their accountant, to the Tax Division of the Department of Justice. The government then obtained an eighteen-count indictment against Costin, Skeddle, and Hobe, including various charges of tax fraud. At various points in the proceedings, the district court entered judgments of acquittal for the defendants on sixteen of the eighteen counts. By the end of the trial, the district court had entered judgments of acquittal on all of the counts against Skeddle. Only four counts — two against Hobe and two against Costin — remained when the case was finally submitted to the jury. The two against Costin — -renumbered counts 18 and 19 of the indictment — were for filing false tax returns on behalf of CJD. Specifically, the counts alleged that Costin falsely claimed business expense deductions on the returns to which CJD was not entitled. The counts also alleged that deductions were false because because CJD was not engaged in any “business” whatsoever.

Costin moved the district court to dismiss counts 18 and 19 as well, arguing that no reasonable jury could find beyond a reasonable doubt that CJD was not engaged in computer consulting work. This is what the court had labeled as the “shell” theory of liability for CJD’s tax returns, under which CJD was not entitled to claim any business deductions. The court held that Costin was correct, in part, in that there was significant evidence presented that CJD performed computer consulting work. To the extent that the counts charged Costin with operating a shell corporation and filing a false tax return because CJD through Costin claimed any business expenses, the district court dismissed the counts. The court, however, permitted the government to proceed on a theory that individual business expense deductions, claimed by CJD, were actually Costin’s personal expenses and therefore were false. Over Costin’s objection that submitting the new theory to the jury would violate the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment, the court held that permitting such a theory was not a constitutionally invalid “constructive amendment” of the indictment because the individual deduction theory was a valid “variance,” or just a narrower version, of the same counts. According to the court, the invalidity of individual deductions would still render the specific statement, alleged to be false in the indictment, actually false.

The jury convicted Costin on both counts of filing false tax returns, after the court instructed the jury on only the individual deduction theory of the counts. The jury acquitted Hobe on his two remaining counts.

Costin moved for a new trial, arguing that the government’s presentation of now irrelevant evidence under the shell theory of criminal liability confused the jury, and such confusion was not adequately addressed by the court’s nearly 100 limiting instructions attempting to withdraw from [729]*729the jury’s consideration evidence pertaining to the counts dismissed by the court. The district court granted Costin’s motion for a new trial. According to the district court, the jury had been exposed to a deluge of now inadmissible evidence, including that Costin “had enriched himself by several million dollars at the expense of his employer.” The government, according to the district court, had inexorably entangled its non-functioning-entity theory, which the court had declared illegitimate, with evidence on the validity of individual deductions. For the court, it seemed too unlikely that the jury abstained from taking into consideration inadmissible testimony in convicting Costin, especially given the extremely complicated and numerous limiting instructions issued by the court.

II

The government now appeals the district court’s grant of a new trial for Costin. Costin cross-appeals, claiming that the district court erred by not entirely dismissing the two remaining counts for filing false tax returns because reprosecution is barred by the Double Jeopardy Clause of the Fifth Amendment. We consider separately the appeal and the cross-appeal below.

A. The New Trial Order

We will not overturn a district court’s granting a new trial to a defendant unless the court abused its discretion. United States v. Taylor, 176 F.3d 331, 335 (6th Cir.1999). Our deferential standard of review reflects the district court’s actual witnessing of the prejudicial evidence to which the jury may have been exposed. As we have previously put the point, “the trial judge, not an appellate court reading a cold record, can best weigh the errors against the record as a whole to determine whether those errors in the conduct of the trial justify a new trial.” United States v. Breinig, 70 F.3d 850, 851 (6th Cir.1995). Given this comparative competence, only in the most rare circumstances will we overturn a district court’s grant of a motion for new trial to a criminal defendant. The district court’s comparative expertise is especially profound in this case, in which the district court heard six weeks of trial testimony and arguments.

Nonetheless, the government argues that the district court abused its discretion. We can discern three allegations of error from the government’s argument.

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Bluebook (online)
59 F. App'x 726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-costin-ca6-2003.