United States v. Gene A. Tyrrell

269 F. App'x 922
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedMarch 17, 2008
Docket05-14492
StatusUnpublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 269 F. App'x 922 (United States v. Gene A. Tyrrell) 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. Gene A. Tyrrell, 269 F. App'x 922 (11th Cir. 2008).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Dean A. Sinibaldi (“Sinibaldi”), Joseph Cuciniello (“Cuciniello”), and Gene A. Tyrrell (“Tyrrell”), were part of a conspiracy group which sold false and unregistered security offerings through the Millenium and Stonehedge Groups and caused great losses to many elderly individuals. Appellants were convicted on specific charges of securities fraud, mail fraud, money laundering, selling of unregistered securities, and conspiracy. Sinibaldi, Cuciniello, and Tyrrell raise numerous issues 1 234challenging *926 evidentiary rulings, legal rulings, their convictions, and the sentences imposed. 2 We affirm.

Factual Background

Millennium Investment, Inc. (“Mil”) was created for the alleged purpose of helping new businesses become publicly traded companies. Defendants Danny Wey (“Wey”) and Gregory G. Schultz (“Schultz”) served as officers and directors of Mil. Shortly thereafter, Millennium Investment, Inc. Trust (“MIIT”) was created to market and sell unregistered notes. The funds raised by MIIT were remitted to Mil. Schultz’s duties included serving as legal counsel to the Millenium entities, drafting MIIT offering documents, and directing MIIT’s fund-raising efforts. Wey’s duties included identifying the investments in which MIIT could place its funds. Although Wey had a criminal background which included a federal conviction of felony fraud offenses, MIIT investors were not so advised despite MIIT disclosure documents with experience profiles for both Wey and Schultz.

Once MIIT commenced its operations, Schultz informed Wey that MIIT notes which matured in less than nine months were exempt from state and federal registration requirements under the “commercial note exemption.” Also, several of the notes MIIT issued included a “banker’s acceptance” provision stating that the Bank of Bermuda Limited, which is one of the largest banks in the Carribean, would guarantee the notes in the event of default. As was ultimately discovered, this bank had never issued a “banker’s acceptance” or any other guarantee to MIIT. In fact, neither the bank nor any of its subsidiaries had ever had a relationship with MIIT, its officials or entities.

Sinibaldi was the top seller at MIIT. For six months, he was involved in fifty-eight MIIT transactions, valued at $1,655,235.68, that purported to be secured by the banker’s acceptance provision. He assured investors that MIIT notes were fully secured by the Bank of Bermuda and were a completely safe investment. At first, Sinibaldi received a commission of up to ten percent of any MIIT investments he secured, but in order to evade securities laws, Schultz determined that this compensation should be characterized as “consulting or advisory payments,” even though Sinibaldi never offered any marketing or consulting services to the Millenium entities. Over a two year period, Sinibaldi and his company, Delta Financial Services, Inc., received a total of $465,234.47 in cash payments and additional securities from Mil (which were sold for about $85,000). From October 1996 to July 1999, individuals invested more than $6 million in MIIT securities; however, by July 1999, MIIT had more than $1 million in past-due notes. Furthermore, despite the fact that MIIT had defaulted on its obligations in October 1998, defendants falsely informed new investors that MIIT notes offered “good security.” By mid-1999, MIIT stopped raising funds.

*927 Defendants then formed the Stonehedge entities. Securities from these entities were marketed through individuals in the financial or insurance business, allegedly to provide funding to companies that were about to make public stock offerings. The Stonehedge offering material stated that “Stonehedge invests their portfolio in a company called Millenium as its vehicle for making the investments.” Stonehedge also advised investors that Millennium principals had over 40 years of experience in taking companies public.

From August 1998 to November 1999, Cueiniello incorporated eight Stonehedge entities in Florida. Then in September and October 1999, despite being aware of an ongoing investigation of defendants’ fraudulent activities by the Florida Department of Banking and Finance (“DBF”), Cueiniello incorporated another seven Stonehedge entities in New York. Cueiniello served as an officer of several Stonehedge entities, was an authorized signator for ten Stonehedge-related bank accounts, and participated in seminars to train others to market Stonehedge securities. Between March 1998 and April 2001, Cueiniello and his family received more than $850,000 from Stonehedge entities.

From March 1998 through November 2000, more than $12.5 million was invested in the Stonehedge offerings. Only about twenty percent of this money was invested as represented in the Stonehedge offering materials. However, up to thirty-three percent of these invested funds were paid out as commissions to those involved in the process.

In January 1998, Cueiniello brought co-defendant Robert Phillips (“Phillips”) to the Stonehedge program. At a meeting held in Clearwater, Florida, Schultz provided further detail to Phillips about the program. Phillips then agreed to market the Stonehedge program through his network of insurance agents, West Coast Distributors, Inc. (“West Coast”). Out of every Stonehedge investment placed by Phillips’s agents, West Coast would receive a commission of up to twenty-seven percent. In order to evade state and federal securities laws, Schultz told Phillips that these payments must be characterized as “referral fees” rather than “commissions.”

In the fall of 1998, Phillips recruited Tyrrell to sell Stonehedge securities. After Tyrrell’s involvement in the Stone-hedge securities, the funds invested increased dramatically, from approximately $30,000 to $100,000 per month to as much as $1,000,000 per month. His sales organization was the largest of all the sales organizations engaged in the Stonehedge marketing effort. Tyrrell participated in and created a training manual for seminars to train new agents to market Stone-hedge securities. Also, Tyrrell was the president, secretary, treasurer, and sole shareholder of one of the entities — The Stonehedge Group, Inc.-X, and thus executed the shares of stock issued in connection with this entity.

From March through July 1999, DBF served investigative subpoenas for testimony and documents on MIIT, Sinibaldi, Global Research International, Inc., and many of the Stonehedge entities. Before responding to the subpoenas, defendants tried to conceal them fraudulent activities by supplementing MIIT investor files with backdated correspondence, and modifying and supplementing Stonehedge investor files to give them the appearance of conforming to applicable state and federal securities laws.

In October 1999, DBF filed a civil action in Pinellas County, Florida, seeking an injunction and appointment of a receiver for Mil, MIIT, various Stonehedge entities, and First Dominion Venture Capital, *928 Inc., and named as “relief defendants” Schultz, Wey, Cueiniello, and Sinibaldi. The state circuit court granted DBF’s requests, entered an injunction, and appointed attorney Gary Lipson as receiver.

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Bluebook (online)
269 F. App'x 922, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gene-a-tyrrell-ca11-2008.