United States v. Frank J. Andrews, Walter Owens, Peter A. Andrews, Jr., Willard Whitley, Guspostell, Louis Tye, Frank D. Andriola, Russell A. Malone

347 F.2d 207, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 5217
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 17, 1965
Docket15623
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 347 F.2d 207 (United States v. Frank J. Andrews, Walter Owens, Peter A. Andrews, Jr., Willard Whitley, Guspostell, Louis Tye, Frank D. Andriola, Russell A. Malone) 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. Frank J. Andrews, Walter Owens, Peter A. Andrews, Jr., Willard Whitley, Guspostell, Louis Tye, Frank D. Andriola, Russell A. Malone, 347 F.2d 207, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 5217 (6th Cir. 1965).

Opinion

EDWARDS, Circuit Judge.

These appeals are from convictions for conspiracy to violate, and specific violations of the Internal Revenue Statutes by fraudulently concealing and withholding gambling excise taxes.

The first count of the indictments was a conspiracy count and the balance of the counts, 2 through 32, consist of the substantive counts of willful understatement of or failure to pay the excise taxes. Count 33 charged violation of the Federal Communications Act, and Counts 34 and 35 charged willful failure to register and pay the wagering occupational tax.

Defendant Frank J. Andrews was found guilty on Count 1 and received a sentence of five years and $10,000 fine. Defendant Daniel Andrews was severed because of his illness. The other seven defendants were found guilty on Count 1 and on a variety of the substantive counts. They were sentenced to terms of five years on each count for which they were convicted, except that Peter A. Andrews and Russell A. Malone were sentenced to only one year for their convictions on Counts 34 and 35. All seven were also fined $10,000 for conviction on Count 1. All of the sentences were made to run concurrently.

This trial was a sequel to large-scale, 1 illegal but wide open gambling operations in Newport, Kentucky. This record clearly establishes the nature and extent of the gambling. Indeed, no defendant, other than Frank Andrews, takes the trouble to deny being in the “business” of gambling during the time concerned. All do deny conspiring to evade federal wagering taxes and the substantive offenses charged.

Each of the several briefs filed on behalf of defendants argues the insufficien *209 cy of the evidence to support the verdicts and in this regard relies upon the applicable law as set forth in Ingram v. United States, 360 U.S. 672,79 S.Ct. 1314, 3 L.Ed.2d 1503 (1959). In that case the United States Supreme Court affirmed convictions as to defendants Ingram and Jenkins (described as “entrepreneurs”) and reversed as to defendants Smith and Law (described as “relatively minor clerical functionaries”).

The Court’s distinctions are set forth in the majority opinion of Mr. Justice Stewart thus:

“But the evidence of agreement between Ingram and Jenkins to operate this gambling enterprise, which operation made them liable for federal taxes, and to conceal its operation and its income is clear on this record, and is virtually conceded by the petitioners. The evidence was sufficient to support a conclusion that they were engaged not only in a conspiracy to operate and conceal their gambling enterprise, but that they were also parties to an agreement to attempt to defeat or evade the federal taxes imposed upon the operators of such a business.
“As to Smith and Law, the case is quite a different one. While the record clearly supports a finding that Smith and Law were participants in a conspiracy to operate a lottery and to conceal that operation from local law enforcement agencies, we find no warrant for a finding that they were, like Ingram and Jenkins, parties to a conspiracy with a purpose illegal under federal law. Certainly there is nothing in the record to show that Smith and Law knew that Ingram and Jenkins had not paid the taxes, a fact obviously within the knowledge of the latter. * * * ” Ingram v. United States, supra at 677, 79 S.Ct. at 1319.

Thus, we take it, convictions for conspiracy to evade federal gambling tax laws cannot be sustained absent proof 1) that defendants were parties to an agreement to defeat or evade the taxes, or 2) that defendants had knowledge that the taxes were due and were not being paid, plus conduct in furtherance of a plan to evade them.

We regard this record as establishing beyond all peradventure of a doubt at least two substantial, deliberate and interrelated schemes for large-scale federal tax evasion. The first such scheme relates to a method for reporting approximately one-quarter of the taxes actually due on the “day” numbers game and other related gambling activities. As testified to by Ruth Jane Siuda, one of the six girls who “ran the work” on the “day” numbers, it was her job after the totalling of the work and after the hits had been determined to “pull the work.” Her testimony leaves no doubt that this meant extracting the most convenient one-quarter of the bet slips so as to show a total take of $l,500-$2,000 per day, whereas in fact the daily total on this operation was $8,500. (See Appendix A.) The federal tax returns show clearly that taxes were paid only on the work thus “pulled.”

The second major scheme for tax evasion involved the operation of a “night” numbers game. The record clearly establishes that no taxes were paid on this game at all, and it is argued to us that we should read the record as establishing that this game was within the exception to the wagering tax statute. Int. Rev.Code of 1954, § 4421(2) (A).

The evidence, however, is overwhelmingly to the contrary, as obviously the jury found. It is patent that many of the persons participating in the “night” numbers operation were not on the premises at the time of the declaration of the winners ánd that the fact situation here involved large-scale telephone bet procedures, as well as the writing of bets off the premises.

As to Walter Owens, Willard Whitley, Peter Andrews, Jr., and Gus Postell, there can be no doubt about their status as entrepreneurs in relation to one or the other of the two major tax evasion schemes which we have referred to above. The records of the gambling partner *210 ships, the tax return forms, and the testimony of Internal Revenue Supervisor William R. Tabb, and Agent Robert L. Thomas is ample to establish this.

We believe that the testimony of the Revenue Agents, plus Government Exhibit 305 (See Appendix B) is sufficient evidence from which the jury could have found Louis Tye and Frank (“Bud”) Andriola guilty on the conspiracy count as entrepreneurs likewise. Furthermore, there was testimony by a government handwriting expert that Exhibit 305 was in the handwriting of defendant Frank J. Andrews. (See Appendix C.)

As to Russell A. Malone, the testimony clearly indicates his role in advertising that no taxes were paid on the “night” numbers game, while at the same time assuring bettors that they did not in fact have to be present to win. Hence, his conviction on the conspiracy count seems warranted by the evidence herein. We regard it as consistent with the second of the two evidentiary standards set forth by Justice Stewart in the Ingram case.

As to defendant Frank J. Andrews, the evidentiary situation relating to Count 1 is quite different. He was admittedly owner of “The Sportsman’s Club” wherein these wide open gambling operations were conducted. It is his contention that his relationship to the club was entirely that of owner of the building and the landlord of those defendants who rented the premises. There is, however, strong circumstantial evidence that defendant Frank J. Andrews was more than a landlord.

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347 F.2d 207, 1965 U.S. App. LEXIS 5217, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-frank-j-andrews-walter-owens-peter-a-andrews-jr-ca6-1965.