United States v. Fern

117 F.3d 1298
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJuly 24, 1997
Docket95-4099
StatusPublished

This text of 117 F.3d 1298 (United States v. Fern) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh 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. Fern, 117 F.3d 1298 (11th Cir. 1997).

Opinion

United States Court of Appeals,

Eleventh Circuit.

Nos. 95-4099, 95-4596.

UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellee,

v.

Daniel J. FERN, Defendant-Appellant.

July 24, 1997.

Appeals from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Florida. (No. 94-322-CR- JM), Jacob Mishler, Judge.

Before HATCHETT, Chief Judge, COX, Circuit Judge, and MESKILL*, Senior Circuit Judge.

HATCHETT, Chief Judge:

In this consolidated appeal, we affirm the convictions of Daniel Fern for mail fraud,

attempted witness tampering and violations of the Clean Air Act.

FACTS

The events leading up to Fern's indictment and eventual convictions began on October 3,

1993. Early that morning, a fire partially damaged the Monte Carlo Oceanfront Resort Hotel, a

thirteen-story building on Miami Beach. The Monte Carlo was insured for up to two million dollars

under a fire loss policy the Lexington Insurance Company issued. Under the fire loss policy,

Lexington agreed to pay for asbestos removal and contamination at the Monte Carlo, but only if the asbestos-related contamination occurred as a result of a fire.

Shortly after the fire, Waquar Ahmed Khan, the president of the company which owned the

Monte Carlo, contracted with Fern to determine whether the Monte Carlo's conference room and

suites were contaminated with asbestos as a result of the fire. At the time, Fern owned an asbestos

testing and consulting firm known as Air Environmental Research Services (AER). Fern then

orchestrated a fraudulent scheme to (1) convince Lexington that the Monte Carlo was contaminated

thoroughly with asbestos; and (2) profit from a bogus asbestos abatement project at the Monte

* Honorable Thomas J. Meskill, Senior U.S. Circuit Judge for the Second Circuit, sitting by designation. Carlo.

The scheme unfolded, in part, as follows. Fern directed the Monte Carlo project manager,

Jerry Joyner, to take a piece of "Mag Block"—a material containing chalky, crushable

asbestos—from a crawl space at the Monte Carlo. Fern then directed Jerry Joyner to take some

"hot" air samples from the Monte Carlo using the Mag Block to spike the samples. (In total, Jerry

Joyner spiked over twenty samples, often in the presence of Fern, Fern's wife or other AER

employees.) After Jerry Joyner spiked the samples, he labeled some of them—at Fern's request—as

if they came from the Monte Carlo's pipe-chases. Fern made this request in order to support a claim

of asbestos contamination within the entire Monte Carlo resort.

After receiving test results from the spiked air samples, Fern's company, AER, proceeded

to prepare an emergency action plan detailing a proposed asbestos abatement project for the Monte

Carlo. Neither Fern nor AER was licensed to conduct asbestos abatement or removal work.

Consequently, Fern needed to list the name of an authorized asbestos abatement company on the

asbestos abatement project paperwork required under 42 U.S.C. § 7413, a provision of the Clean Air

Act.1

On October 13, 1993, Fern, or one of his employees, filed the first of three Ten-Day Notices

completed during the course of the proposed Monte Carlo asbestos abatement project. This Ten-Day

Notice—as well as subsequent notices filed on December 14, 1993, and April 4, 1994—contained false responses indicating that a company named Action Systems Unlimited, Inc., was responsible

for the asbestos abatement project at the Monte Carlo, and that Judy Joyner—Jerry Joyner's

sister-in-law and the president of Action Systems—was the on-site supervisor.2 The Ten-Day Notice also contained Judy Joyner's forged signature on the notice lines indicating that the information on

the notice was correct and that an appropriately trained individual would be on-site at the Monte

1 Specifically, Fern needed to list the name of an authorized company on government-required "Notification of Demolition and Renovation" forms, commonly known as "Ten-Day Notices." 2 The third notice is slightly different from the first two notices and is captioned "Notice of Asbestos Removal Project." While the first two notices are two-page forms, the third notice is a one-page form. The differences between the forms do not affect our analysis. Carlo during the asbestos abatement project.3 The first and third Ten-Day Notices also contain

references to Judy Joyner's Florida asbestos removal license number.

Neither Judy Joyner nor Action Systems ever did any work at the Monte Carlo. Moreover,

Judy Joyner testified at trial that she never authorized anyone to sign her name, use Action Systems's

name or use her asbestos removal license number on a Ten-Day Notice for the Monte Carlo asbestos

abatement project. Nevertheless, Fern instructed Jerry Joyner to tell anyone who inquired that he

worked for Action Systems and that Action Systems was the actual asbestos removal contractor at

the Monte Carlo.

At trial, two officials with the Metropolitan Dade County Department of Environmental

Resources Management (DERM) testified about the significance of the Ten-Day Notices.

According to Hugh Wong, chief of DERM's Air Pollution Control section, Ten-Day Notices are

federally required notices that provide information on sites so that regulators can make sure that

work is going to be done properly. Wong testified that he "absolutely" relied on the information

contained in Ten-Day Notices and that it is important for the information to be accurate. Wong also

indicated that DERM uses the information in Ten-Day Notices to determine if the contractor is

certified or not, and stated that "if we have not inspected that contractor's work before, we try and

target the inspections [to that contractor]." Ray Gordon, a DERM asbestos supervisor, testified that

before employees in his office input information from Ten-Day Notices into their computers, they

check to make sure that the contractor has a license number noted on the Notice and that the

contractor is familiar to them. According to Gordon, the only way DERM officials can know if the

individual removing asbestos is properly trained is "if they have the appropriate license."

In addition to submitting false Ten-Day Notices, Fern, and/or AER, also filed documents

representing that the contents of the Monte Carlo (e.g., room furnishings and equipment) had to be

destroyed because of asbestos contamination. In actuality, Fern gave away, sold or kept most of the

Monte Carlo's furnishings and equipment.

3 The text under Judy Joyner's forged signature indicated that the signature above belonged to the "Owner/Operator"—an apparent reference to the facility owner or renovation project supervisor. Ultimately, Fern submitted a bill for over five hundred thousand dollars to the Monte Carlo

for the cost of the bogus asbestos abatement project. The bill was converted into a proof-of-loss and

submitted to Lexington via the mail. At trial, Daniel Corbeil, a former co-owner of Action Systems,

testified that Fern bragged to him about how he fooled Lexington with spiked samples and with the

Action Systems license.

In 1994, the Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) started investigating Fern's work at

the Monte Carlo. Jerry Joyner and other AER employees cooperated with the EPA. Jerry Joyner

played a critical role in the investigation; he taped his conversations with Fern.

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