United States v. David A. Feldman

756 F.2d 556, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 29750
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 4, 1985
Docket84-1460
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 756 F.2d 556 (United States v. David A. Feldman) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh 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. David A. Feldman, 756 F.2d 556, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 29750 (7th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

CUDAHY, Circuit Judge.

In 1981 a jury found the appellant guilty of nineteen counts of mail fraud and nine counts of wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1343. He was sentenced to eighteen months imprisonment and five years.probation. This court affirmed the conviction. 711 F.2d 758. Appellant entered a motion, in the district court, for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. He appeals now from the denial of that motion.

I.

In 1977 David Feldman was an option broker for Merrill Lynch, Pierce, Fenner & Smith (“Merrill Lynch”) in Chicago. His neighbor and good friend, George Joyner, was a controller for Brinks, Inc. In March 1977 Feldman was transferred to the Hollywood, California, office of Merrill Lynch, where he was made branch manager. At about the same time Feldman and Joyner agreed to create an investment partnership, Western Investment Company, which would benefit from Feldman’s special expertise in the options market. The partnership was to be a client of Merrill Lynch and so, because of a Merrill Lynch policy prohibiting employees from having a financial interest in a customer’s account, the partnership agreement did not mention Feld-man’s 50% interest. 1

In the California Merrill Lynch office Feldman prepared to set up an account for Western Investment. Apparently such an account requires a client to provide Merrill Lynch either with sufficient cash, or with “guarantee letters” from a bank indicating that funds are available, to cover the possibility that options will be exercised; Feld-man and Joyner accordingly scheduled a meeting with Joyner’s banker, Harold Dil-lenbach, at the Harris Trust and Savings Bank (the “Bank”) in Chicago. According to testimony at the trial, Dillenbach was not encouraging; the chief “hangup,” as he himself testified, to the Bank’s providing guarantee letters in the amount of $50,000 to $100,000 was that the Feldman-Joyner plan would not allow them to secure the letters with collateral registered in their own names, since that would have disclosed Feldman’s role in the partnership. Feld-man returned to California without the guarantee letters from the Bank. A few days later Dillenbach told Joyner that the Bank had denied their request.

So far there is general agreement, but at this point the stories of Joyner and Feld-man diverge. Joyner claimed at trial that Feldman telephoned him and told him he would send him a blank letter of credit which he could xerox after altering it with a Harris Bank letterhead. On this counterfeit form, according to Joyner’s story, he was to prepare a guarantee letter which would falsely indicate that Harris Bank had $1,000,000 on deposit to cover any trades made in the name of the partnership. Joyner did his part: he prepared the fake guarantee letter and sent it on to Feldman. This first letter was followed by others, since each options transaction had to be covered by a separate guarantee letter. The letters were signed, “Albert Cooke.”

Feldman’s story is different. He claimed, and he claims now, that he was unaware of the fraud. He denies having sent the blank form to Joyner, and he denies having discussed with Joyner the idea of producing the counterfeit letters of credit. He points to evidence that he actually undertook to meet the “Albert Cooke” who signed the guarantee letters in January, 1978, but that he found out through *558 Joyner that Cooke could not make the planned meeting. 2

By either account, the arrangement began to come apart in February, 1978. Joyner had eventually arranged for Kay’s Answering Service at 171 Monroe Street in Chicago (not far from the Harris Bank) to receive mail and calls for Albert Cooke under the name “HTS-Options,” a name chosen to suggest the appropriate connection with the Harris Bank. Mail and calls were all forwarded to Joyner. The guarantee letters, which Merrill Lynch’s assistant operations manager in Hollywood testified he received directly from Feldman and returned directly to Feldman, were to be sent to this Chicago address when they expired.

In February, several of these letters were returned as undeliverable. Feldman told his secretary to add a room number and to mail them out again, and these letters were then apparently addressed to “Harris Trust & Savings Bank” rather than to HTS-Options. As we shall see, the defense rests one of its contentions on the possibility that the returned letters were also addressed to Harris Trust & Savings Bank. In any event, the newly addressed letters were misdelivered to the real Harris Bank, and the scheme was exposed.

Joyner and Feldman were indicted. Joyner agreed to plead guilty to two counts and to cooperate in the government’s case against Feldman, and the government dropped the remaining counts against Joyner. Feldman did not present any evidence at his trial, but argued that the government had not proved beyond a reasonable doubt that the guarantee letters were forgeries. He was convicted and sentenced to an eighteen month jail sentence.

In November, 1983, Feldman entered, in the district court, a motion for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. That motion was denied, and apparently the denial was not appealed. In March, 1984, Feldman again moved for a new trial based on newly discovered evidence. It is from the denial of that motion that Feldman now appeals.

II.

The purportedly new evidence consists of the expected testimony of Dianne Warner, Feldman’s secretary at Merrill Lynch, and of post-trial statements, oral and written, made by Joyner to Feldman and Feldman’s attorneys.

A. Dianne Warner’s Civil Deposition.

Ten months after Feldman’s trial Dianne Warner gave testimony at a deposition in a related civil case. Feldman claims that this testimony establishes conclusively that Feldman had no knowledge of the phoniness of the “HTS-Option” mail drop, and that he believed the address to be a genuine Harris Bank áddress.

At the deposition Warner testified, from notes she had made shortly after the scheme was uncovered, that on February 21, 1978, she showed Feldman several of the guarantee letters which had been returned as undeliverable. She also testified that Feldman, after making a phone call, told her to add a room number and send them out again, and that he did not tell her to change the address in any other way. Feldman has introduced into the record, together with the transcript of the deposition, Warner’s notes and xeroxes of two envelopes, all government exhibits at the time. One of the envelopes was evidently mailed to the phony drop on February 13, 1978 and it bears the address:

Mr. Albert R. Cooke
Harris Trust & Savings Bank
171 West Monroe Street Chicago, Illinois 60603.

This address shows, of course, that letters were being sent out with the full name of the bank — instead of merely “HTS-Options” — as early as February 13. The oth *559

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Bluebook (online)
756 F.2d 556, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 29750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-david-a-feldman-ca7-1985.