United States v. Frank Peter Balistrieri, Steve Disalvo, and Dennis Librizzi, Defendants

779 F.2d 1191
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedNovember 26, 1985
Docket84-2001, 84-2004 and 84-2012
StatusPublished
Cited by284 cases

This text of 779 F.2d 1191 (United States v. Frank Peter Balistrieri, Steve Disalvo, and Dennis Librizzi, Defendants) 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. Frank Peter Balistrieri, Steve Disalvo, and Dennis Librizzi, Defendants, 779 F.2d 1191 (7th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

ESCHBACH, Circuit Judge.

Appellants were convicted of conducting an illegal gambling business, conspiracy to conduct such a business, and (except DiSal-vo) willful failure to file certain tax forms, and they now appeal. We affirm their convictions.

I.

The convictions we review today arose out of a lengthy and painstaking government investigation of organized sports gambling activities in Milwaukee, Wisconsin, from 1977 into 1980. The government collected its evidence through physical surveillance, electronic surveillance, warrant-authorized searches, and infiltration by two undercover FBI agents. From this evidence the government developed its theory that the three appellants, along with a number of others, conspired to run a suc *1196 cession of sports gambling businesses during the period. According to the theory, Frank Balistrieri was the owner of the businesses, Steve DiSalvo supervised them, and Dennis Librizzi participated in at least one of them — a basketball bookmaking operation in early 1980.

Appellants, along with many others, were indicted on October 1, 1981. The case was assigned to Judge Robert W. Warren. Balistrieri promptly filed a motion for the disqualification of Judge Warren, the first of several motions in an ultimately successful effort to induce Judge Warren to re-cuse himself. The case was reassigned to Judge Terence T. Evans for trial, and trial commenced on August 29, 1983. On October 9, 1983, the jury rendered its verdicts.

II. Frank Balistrieri (No. 84-2001)

Frank Balistrieri was convicted of one count of conspiracy to direct an illegal gambling business, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 371, two counts of conducting an illegal gambling business, in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 1955, and two counts of failure to file certain tax returns, in violation of 26 U.S.C. § 7203. He was acquitted on one count of conducting an illegal gambling business and four other tax counts. On May 29, 1984, he was sentenced to four years imprisonment and a fine of $4,000 on the conspiracy, four years imprisonment and a fine of $10,000 on one of the § 1955 counts, four years imprisonment and a fine of $4,000 on the other § 1955 count, and one year imprisonment and a fine of $1,000 on each of the two tax counts, with all the sentences of imprisonment to run concurrently.

On appeal, Balistrieri assigns eight errors in the proceedings below.

A. Recusal of Judge Warren

1. Background

Balistrieri contends that he is entitled to a new trial because Judge Warren, who decided virtually all of the pretrial motions, should have recused himself at the outset. Balistrieri moved four times to disqualify Judge Warren on the ground that Warren, during the period from 1969 into 1971 while serving as the Attorney General of Wisconsin, had formed a firm belief that Balistri-eri was the head of the Milwaukee Mafia and had announced that belief and acted on it as Attorney General on numerous occasions. 1

Judge Warren denied the first three of Balistrieri’s recusal motions, holding that the first and second were inadequate to satisfy the statutory standard for disqualification and that the third was untimely. Coupled with the filing of the fourth motion, a week before the start of trial, a Milwaukee attorney, Roland J. Steinle, Jr., issued a press release charging that Judge Warren was personally responsible for an alleged 1969 burglary of his law office and theft of a client file relating to his representation of Balistrieri. Steinle also announced that he intended to file a civil lawsuit against Judge Warren and another person based on that alleged incident. 2 Judge Warren, while categorically denying all these allegations, nevertheless recused himself because he thought that a reasonable person might find an appearance of partiality.

Balistrieri argues that the recusal came too late; because Judge Warren should have recused himself at the start, none of *1197 his rulings on pretrial motions was valid. We disagree. We do not question Judge Warren’s exercise of discretion in recusing himself in the face of Steinle’s public activities, but we hold that he was under no obligation to recuse himself earlier.

2. The Affidavits

Balistrieri submitted his first motion for recusal on October 26, 1981, shortly after Judge Warren’s assignment to the case. The affidavit accompanying the motion set forth various statements and actions attributed to Judge Warren during the period from 1969 through early 1971, when he was Attorney General of Wisconsin. According to the affidavit, Warren believed that Frank Balistrieri was the head of the Mafia family in Wisconsin. Warren allegedly set into operation a systematic program, or “vendetta,” designed to ruin Bal-istrieri and to destroy businesses with which he or his relatives were associated. As a part of this program, Warren moved to dissolve certain Balistrieri-linked corporations for failure to file annual reports, saying that this “crackdown” was an effort to keep the crime syndicate out of legitimate business in Wisconsin. Warren also sought injunctions against four Balistrieri-linked taverns for not having workmen’s compensation insurance. On November 28, 1969, fourteen agents (ten from the Attorney General’s office) participated in a raid on the Scene, a nightclub which the press described as linked to Balistrieri. In June 1970 Warren objected to the Milwaukee Common Council’s granting of liquor licenses to taverns associated with Balistri-eri. In an interview after almost two years in office, Warren said the following:

A characteristic of organized crime ... is that it ignores many of the laws regulating businesses — laws which require annual reports, seller’s permits, workmen’s compensation insurance and restrict liquor credit.
To get at organized crime in legitimate businesses, the State started a myriad of civil actions against businesses believed to be controlled by organized crime figures.
“We had to start at the bottom with some rather mundane things,” Warren said. "For example, we found that the Balistrieri family had not been filing annual corporation reports.”

The affidavit also set forth that ce.rtain individuals and corporations associated with Balistrieri filed two lawsuits against Warren, the first seeking injunctive relief and damages for the raid on the Scene, and the second seeking damages for the effort to close a certain nightclub for failure to have workmen’s compensation insurance. The first suit was voluntarily dismissed, and the second was dismissed on grounds of immunity.

Balistrieri’s second motion for recusal was filed on July 20,1983. It incorporated the previous affidavit and included a new affidavit from one John Forbes. 3

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Bluebook (online)
779 F.2d 1191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-frank-peter-balistrieri-steve-disalvo-and-dennis-ca7-1985.