United States v. Irving Rubin, Robert Bonczyk, and James Heffernan

999 F.2d 194, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 16080
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedJune 30, 1993
Docket93-1076, 93-1077
StatusPublished
Cited by25 cases

This text of 999 F.2d 194 (United States v. Irving Rubin, Robert Bonczyk, and James Heffernan) 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. Irving Rubin, Robert Bonczyk, and James Heffernan, 999 F.2d 194, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 16080 (7th Cir. 1993).

Opinion

MANION, Circuit Judge.

The United States of America (“government”) charged Irving Rubin, Robert Bone-zyk, and James Heffernan (“defendants”) with one count of criminal antitrust conspiracy under 15 U.S.C. § 1 for fixing the prices of new steel drums used to store liquid products and with two counts of mail fraud under *195 18 U.S.C. § 1341 for concealing and making false statements to cover their collusion. The district court determined that Sentencing Guidelines section 2R1.1 (“Antitrust Offenses”) applied to the price-fixing count and that section 2F1.1 (“Offenses Involving Fraud or Deceit”) applied to the mail fraud counts. After grouping the offenses, the district court sentenced the defendants under section 2F1.1, which gave them a greater penalty than they would have received had the court applied section 2R1.1 to each of the three counts. On appeal,, the defendants challenge only the court’s application of section 2F1.1 to their mail fraud counts. We vacate the sentences and remand for further sentencing consistent with this opinion.

I. Background

The defendants worked in the steel drum manufacturing business. The drums the defendants manufactured were used mainly for the packaging of chemical and petroleum products. The drums ranged in size from thirteen to fifty-seven gallons. Rubin was Chairman of the Board and Chief Executive Officer of Container Products, Inc., and Bonczyk was its Executive Vice President. Heffernan was Vice President of Sales and Marketing of Astro Container Company.

In a superseding indictment, the government charged the defendants and others with one count of criminal price-fixing and with two - counts of mail fraud. In count one, the government charged the defendants with entering into and engaging in “a combination and conspiracy ... to suppress competition by fixing prices of new steel drums offered for sale to customers in Ohio, Michigan, western New York, western Pennsylvania, and West Virginia” (the “East Central Region”). This conspiracy to fix prices began in October 1988 and lasted through March 1990. To form and execute their conspiracy, the government charged that the defendants, among other things:

(a) agreed to increase prices of new steel drums;
(b) agreed to adopt published list prices for new steel drums;
(c) exchanged with one another price lists and other price information;
(d) issued price announcements, price lists, bids and quotations in accordance with agreements reached;
(e) met in a Holiday Inn in the Cleveland, Ohio area on or about December 21, 1988, at a Radisson Hotel in the Columbus, Ohio area on or about January 26, 1989, at the Union League Club in Chicago, Illinois on or about February 10, 1989, and elsewhere and at other times, for the purpose of discussing and agreeing upon prices and price lists for new steel drums;
(f) telephoned or otherwise contacted one another to discuss, agree upon, and convey agreements regarding prices, price lists, bids and quotations for new steel drums, and to implement and police such agreements; and
(g) organized and maintained a trade association known as the Midwest Steel Drum Manufacturer’s Association for the purpose of promoting, facilitating, policing, concealing, covering-up, and otherwise furthering, aiding and abetting the aforesaid combination and conspiracy.

In counts two and three, the government charged the defendants with devising, intending to devise, and participating “in a scheme and artifice to defraud purchasers of new steel drums offered for sale [in the East Central Region] and to obtain money and property from such purchasers, by means of false and fraudulent pretenses and representations.” The government charged that part of the defendants’ scheme and artifice' to defraud was to engage in the same type of conduct, enumerated above as (a) through (g), that they had engaged in in their price-fixing scheme. The government further charged that the defendants and their co-schemers “made false statements and representations to purchasers of new steel drums in the East Central Region, and failed to inform such purchasers, about the noncompetitive and collusive nature of prices, price lists, bids and quotations for new steel drums.” Lastly, -the government charged that the defendants and their co-schemers knowingly caused to be mailed a price list to a customer and one to another co-schemer.

*196 Rubin and Bonczyk pleaded guilty to all counts. Heffernan went to trial, and the jury found him guilty as charged. The defendants do not appeal their convictions or the application of section 2R1.1 to count one. They appeal only their sentences under the two counts for mail fraud.

At the sentencing hearing, the defendants argued that the district court should apply the Antitrust Offenses Guideline, section 2R1.1, to their mail fraud counts, rather than the Fraud or Deceit Guideline, section 2F1.1, because the conduct involved in the mail fraud counts was incidental to the price-fixing and designed to conceal their conspiracy. Relying on Application Note 13 to section 2F1.1, the defendants argued that because the underlying conduct in the mail fraud counts essentially dealt with their anticom-petitive scheme, section 2R1.1, and not section 2F1.1, “more aptly” applied to their underlying conduct. In contrast, the government argued chiefly that the Sentencing Guidelines as a whole and Application Note 13 'required the district court to apply the Guideline section that covered the more serious offense committed. Because mail fraud is a more serious offense than price-fixing, the government asserted that the district court should apply section 2F1.1 because it yielded a higher offense level and a greater sentence. The district court agreed with the government’s analysis of the issue. The court concluded that the defendants committed a price-fixing violation and two mail fraud violations. It applied section 2R1.1 to the price-fixing count and section 2F1.1 to the mail fraud counts. After grouping the counts, the court sentenced the defendants under section 2F1.1, not section 2R1.1.. Section 2F1.1 provided a greater term of imprisonment than did section 2R1.1.

II. Analysis

On appeal, the government has abandoned for the most part the main argument it made to the district court at sentencing that, in selecting the appropriate Guideline, the court should apply the Guideline that resulted in the “more onerous” sentence; the district court relied on that argument in reaching its sentencing decision. The government now agrees with the defendants that the sole issue on appeal is whether the district court erred in applying the Fraud and Deceit Guideline, section 2F1.1, instead of utilizing Application Note 13 and applying the Antitrust Offenses Guideline, section 2R1.1, to the conduct with which the government charged the defendants in counts two and three of the indictment. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1291

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Bluebook (online)
999 F.2d 194, 1993 U.S. App. LEXIS 16080, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-irving-rubin-robert-bonczyk-and-james-heffernan-ca7-1993.