United States v. Henry Centracchio and Anthony Salemi

774 F.2d 856, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 24271
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedOctober 16, 1985
Docket84-2678, 84-2773
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 774 F.2d 856 (United States v. Henry Centracchio and Anthony Salemi) 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. Henry Centracchio and Anthony Salemi, 774 F.2d 856, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 24271 (7th Cir. 1985).

Opinion

HARLINGTON WOOD, Jr., Circuit Judge.

Each defendant raises a separate single issue. Defendant Henry J. Centracchio claims he did not receive a fair trial because of exchanges between his retained counsel and the district judge in the presence of the jury. Defendant Anthony J. Salemi claims he did not receive a fair trial because the trial judge declined to sever his trial from that of his codefendant Centrac-chio.

The defendants, together with a code-fendant, Lambert F. Beck, were indicted for conspiracy to commit an offense against the United States. 1 Beck, an officer of the Broadway Bank, Chicago, Illinois, was also indicted for multiple acts of misapplication of bank funds insured by the Federal Deposit Insurance Corporation. 2 Salemi and Centracchio were indicted for aiding and abetting Beck. Beck pled guilty. A jury found Centracchio and Sale-mi guilty of conspiracy, Centracchio of fourteen counts of aiding and abetting Beck, and Salemi of twenty-two counts of aiding and abetting Beck. Centracchio was acquitted on one aiding and abetting count. 3

Facts

Beck and Salemi first met in 1976 when Beck worked as a cashier at Dempster Plaza Bank and Salemi was a depositor. Sale-mi and Centracchio had been close friends and sometimes business associates since 1963. Both Salemi and Centracchio were having financial problems during the period of the conspiracy, from July, 1981, to April, 1982.

During the conspiracy period Beck served as vice-president and installment loan officer of the Broadway Bank. Salemi and Centracchio induced Beck to fraudulently divert in excess of $275,000 in the bank’s funds to them. Beck provided this beneficient banking service by making false entries in installment loan and other bank records, and by falsifying collateral records for car loans. Beck provided this service at the bank by himself. Centrac-chio, Salemi, and Beck communicated almost exclusively over the telephone to avoid arousing suspicions. Nonetheless, *858 the bank president eventually grew suspicious and began an investigation.

The fraudulent loans fall into three categories. In the first category were loans drawn by Centracchio and Salemi for themselves, either in their own names or through “straw” borrowers, and loans drawn by the codefendants’ friends, employees, and associates who were unemployed, bankrupt, or otherwise burdened with liens, judgments, loans, and debts.

The second category of loans did not go to such worthy purposes, but were drawn in the names of Salemi’s former employees, acquaintances, and relatives, none of whom had any connection with the bank or authorized the use of their names. Some of the proceeds from this group of loans, as might be expected, were traced to the bank accounts of Salemi and Centracchio. The evidence showed that Salemi had written one of the loan applications and likely forged the endorsement on the resulting loan check. One of Salemi’s employees admitted forging one loan application and check as a favor to Salemi. Salemi kept a supply of loan forms in his office which took on some characteristics of a branch bank.

In the third category were loans issued in the names of fictitious persons. Cent-racchio second endorsed the cashier’s checks issued by Beck for this group of loans. Some of the funds were traced to Centracchio’s checking account at another bank. Centracchio forged a few applications himself.

Except for a case of champagne from Salemi, it is not clear what rewards Beck received for his innovative and liberal banking practices.

Centracchio called two character and reputation witnesses, and two friends who testified that they got loans from Beck without help from Centracchio. Centracchio’s daughter testified for her father about a $9,500 loan she got from Beck; she was, however, unaware that the collateral for the loan was a nonexistent late model Cadillac.

Some of the government witnesses who received Beck loans were still friends of the defendants and portrayed them both as nice, helpful fellows who never instructed them to mislead Beck about their financial condition or pay Beck any kickbacks.

In his testimony Centracchio admitted filling out a few Beck loan applications for Salemi as Salemi did for him on occasion. Sometimes Centracchio also cashed Broadway loan checks payable to third parties for Salemi. Centracchio.and Salemi were longtime and trusting friends. Centracchio testified, however, that in late 1981 he began to be concerned about Salemi’s mental condition and business judgment. Centrac-chio testified that Beck asked Salemi and him to help collect some of the bank’s bad loans. In their cross-examinations both defense counsel attempted to single out Beck as the lonely culprit who ran the program on his own for his own benefit, the success of which could be judged by the cash in his safety box. They also attempted to blame the bank for its negligent oversight. Finally both counsel tried in cross-examination to point the finger at a former employee of Salemi, but being deceased he could not defend himself.

We need not run out the evidence in all the loan transactions as they fit a pattern which can be sufficiently seen from what has already been recounted.

Centracchio

Centracchio claims he did not receive a fair trial because of the “repeated clashes, open hostility and obvious rancor” between his retained counsel, Frank Oliver, and the district judge, Milton I. Shadur. Seventeen samples are cited from the over two-thousand-page transcript generated by the twelve-day trial. Centracchio suggests, but does not argue, that attorney Oliver was both technically and strategically correct in his approach to each witness. Of course the correctness of the rulings is not now the issue, rather the issue is whether the exchanges prejudiced the jury. The *859 government charges that attorney Oliver continually baited and argued with Judge Shadur.

It is not necessary for our purposes to set forth in full all seventeen portions of the transcript Centracchio cites. We give a few examples in the footnotes. 4 On the *860 strength of these seventeen portions of the transcript Centraechio claims that hostility-permeated the trial. Considering the size of the trial record those seventeen transcript portions, which only take up thirteen pages of the brief, are all but lost in the two-thousand pages of trial transcript. Centraechio colorfully argues that since he in no way “fueled the flames of antagonism and hostility which engulfed the courtroom,” he should not be the one to suffer from the obvious results of the “conflagration,” which caused his defense of good faith and reliance upon his codefendant to fall victim to the clash between judge and lawyer.

Although unorthodox, unfortunate, and not in the best professional tradition, the seventeen cited exchanges do not demonstrate that “the flames of antagonism and hostility” consumed Centracchio’s fair trial rights. Centracchio likens this situation to that reviewed by this court in United States v.

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Bluebook (online)
774 F.2d 856, 1985 U.S. App. LEXIS 24271, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-henry-centracchio-and-anthony-salemi-ca7-1985.