United States v. Gramins

939 F.3d 429
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedSeptember 20, 2019
Docket18-2007-cr
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 939 F.3d 429 (United States v. Gramins) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Second 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. Gramins, 939 F.3d 429 (2d Cir. 2019).

Opinion

18-2007-cr United States v. Gramins

18‐2007‐cr United States v. Gramins

1 UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS 2 FOR THE SECOND CIRCUIT 3 4 August Term 2018 5 6 (Argued: November 27, 2018 Decided: September 20, 2019) 7 8 No. 18‐2007‐cr 9 10 –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 11 12 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, 13 14 Appellant, 15 16 ‐v.‐ 17 18 MICHAEL GRAMINS, 19 20 Defendant‐Appellee.1 21 22 –––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––––– 23 24 Before: LIVINGSTON, CARNEY, and SULLIVAN, Circuit Judges. 25 26 Michael Gramins, a trader of Residential Mortgage‐Backed Securities 27 (“RMBS”), was convicted of conspiracy to commit wire fraud and securities fraud 28 by a jury in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut. At 29 Gramins’s trial, the district court had admitted testimony from one of Gramins’s 30 counterparties tending to establish that the counterparty credited Gramins’s 31 representations when Gramins acted as a “broker” between two counterparties.

1 The Clerk of Court is respectfully instructed to amend the caption as set forth above.

1 1 Shortly following Gramins’s conviction, we decided United States v. Litvak, 889 2 F.3d 56 (2d Cir. 2018) (“Litvak II”), which held in the context of a similar 3 prosecution that the erroneous and idiosyncratic viewpoint of a defendant’s 4 counterparty could not be relevant to the objective, “reasonable investor” standard 5 for materiality in a securities fraud prosecution. The district court (Chatigny, J.) 6 then sought to apply our holding in Litvak II to this case, and granted Gramins’s 7 motion for a new trial on the basis that counterparty testimony had been 8 improperly admitted against Gramins at trial. We conclude, however, that the 9 counterparty testimony at Gramins’s trial was not improperly admitted and did 10 not implicate our holding in Litvak II. Accordingly, the judgment of the district 11 court is REVERSED and the case is REMANDED to the district court with 12 instructions to reinstate the conviction. 13 14 FOR APPELLANT: HEATHER CHERRY, Assistant United States 15 Attorney (David E. Novick, Jonathan N. 16 Francis, Sandra S. Glover, Assistant United 17 States Attorneys, on the brief), for John H. 18 Durham, United States Attorney for the 19 District of Connecticut, New Haven, CT, for 20 the United States of America. 21 22 FOR DEFENDANT‐APPELLEE: MARC L. MUKASEY (Jeffrey B. Sklaroff, on the 23 brief), Greenberg Traurig, LLP, New York, 24 NY, for Michael Gramins. 25 26 DEBRA ANN LIVINGSTON, Circuit Judge:

27 On June 15, 2017, a jury in the United States District Court for the District of

28 Connecticut convicted Defendant‐Appellee Michael Gramins of conspiracy to

29 commit wire fraud and securities fraud. Gramins and his alleged co‐

30 conspirators, former traders of Residential Mortgage Backed Securities (“RMBS”)

31 at Nomura Securities International, Inc. (“Nomura”), lied to their counterparties

2 1 about contemporaneous price negotiations with other, third‐party counterparties.

2 Those lies caused Nomura’s counterparties to increase their bids and decrease

3 their offers when they would not otherwise have done so. The counterparties

4 believed that they were adjusting their bids or offers in response to bona fide,

5 contemporaneous negotiations with those other, third‐party counterparties, and

6 paying Nomura a modest commission to facilitate supposedly “riskless”

7 transactions with those counterparties. In reality, Gramins’s false statements

8 carved out sizable spreads between Nomura’s buying‐counterparties’ bids and its

9 selling‐counterparties’ offers, allowing Nomura to reap substantial profits

10 unbeknownst to the counterparty on either side of the transaction.

11 At Gramins’s trial, the government elicited testimony from several of

12 Nomura’s counterparties that Gramins’s and his alleged co‐conspirators’ lies were

13 important to their investment decisions—in other words, that those

14 misrepresentations were “material.” Shortly after the jury’s guilty verdict, we

15 held in United States v. Litvak, 889 F.3d 56 (2d Cir. 2018) (“Litvak II”), that the

16 admission of testimony from a counterparty who erroneously asserts the existence

17 of an agency relationship between himself and his broker‐dealer unduly

18 prejudices the jury on the issue of materiality, violating Federal Rules of Evidence

3 1 (“FRE”) 401 and 403 and requiring a new trial. Following the issuance of our

2 decision in Litvak II, Gramins supplemented his pending motion for a new trial,

3 arguing that one of the government’s witnesses at his trial—Joel Wollman of QVT

4 Financial—had implied (without explicitly stating) an erroneous belief in the

5 existence of an agency relationship between himself and Gramins. The district

6 court (Chatigny, J.) then granted Gramins’s motion for a new trial, citing Litvak II.

7 We REVERSE the district court’s order and REMAND to the district court with

8 instructions to reinstate the conviction and proceed to sentencing.

9 BACKGROUND

10 I.

11 Gramins’s conspiracy capitalized on certain distinctive features of the

12 market for RMBS. As noted above, “RMBS” stands for Residential Mortgage‐

13 Backed Securities. RMBS are “large and complex aggregations of residential

14 mortgages and home equity loans.” Litvak II, 889 F.3d at 59. Banks typically

15 create RMBS by packaging together groups of mortgages and issuing bonds

16 backed by the principal and interest payments of the homeowners who received

17 the mortgages. Investors assess the value of RMBS in part by estimating the

18 probability of repayment or default on the various loans that comprise them.

4 1 RMBS are priced in terms of percentage of face value, with the face value of

2 each RMBS derived from the value of its component mortgages. Investors

3 negotiate RMBS prices in small increments called “ticks,” with one tick equal to

4 1/32 of a percentage point of the bond’s face value. Thirty‐two ticks therefore

5 equal one full percentage point of face value, or one penny on every dollar of face

6 value. So, for instance, if Nomura agreed to buy a RMBS for “65 and 16 ticks,” it

7 agreed to pay 65.5% of the face value of that bond.2

8 RMBS are “bought and sold at very high prices” and, as a result, typically

9 “marketed to large, sophisticated financial institutions” like banks and hedge

10 funds. Litvak II, 889 F.3d at 60. Given the large size and unique features of each

11 RMBS, the RMBS market lacks an “exchange” of the sort on which traditional

12 corporate stocks and Treasury bonds trade. Moreover, the price at which a given

13 RMBS will trade is generally not publicly known. Consequently, institutional

14 investors looking to transact in RMBS must “contact registered broker‐dealers . . .

15 to find interested buyers or sellers,” or transact “directly with [the] broker‐dealers”

16 from the broker‐dealers’ own accounts. Id.

2 Throughout this opinion, we express the prices of various RMBS with hyphens, such that a price of 65 and 16 ticks appears as “65‐16.”

5 1 Enter Gramins. Between 2009 and 2013, Gramins traded RMBS at

2 Nomura, a broker‐dealer registered with the Securities and Exchange

3 Commission. Institutional investors frequently reached out to Nomura when

4 looking to buy or sell a particular security. Gramins and his fellow traders would

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939 F.3d 429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-gramins-ca2-2019.