United States v. Jacques Dessange, Inc.

4 F. App'x 59
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedFebruary 16, 2001
DocketNo. 00-1486
StatusPublished

This text of 4 F. App'x 59 (United States v. Jacques Dessange, Inc.) 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. Jacques Dessange, Inc., 4 F. App'x 59 (2d Cir. 2001).

Opinion

SUMMARY ORDER

UPON DUE CONSIDERATION, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the judgment of the district court be, and it hereby is, AFFIRMED.

Defendant Howard David Deutsch was convicted by a jury on April 20, 2000 in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York (Cote, Judge) of conspiracy to submit false visa applications to the INS, conspiracy to obstruct justice, obstructing an INS investigation, and witness tampering. Deutsch was sentenced to 37 months in jail and ordered to pay a $7,500 fine.

Deutsch argues on appeal that the evidence at trial was insufficient to support his convictions under the federal witness tampering and obstruction statutes, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1512(b) & 1505. He further argues that if those convictions are reversed, the two remaining conspiracy charges must also be dismissed, and, in any event, that he is entitled to a new trial because he should have been tried separately from his corporate co-defendant. Finding no merit in Deutsch’s contentions, we affirm.

I.

Except as provided below, familiarity with the facts of this case is assumed. Deutsch was the senior partner in a New York immigration law firm bearing his name and the name of his junior partner, Libby Salberg. Between 1994 and October 1997, Deutsch, Salberg, and Jacques Dessange, Inc. (“JDI”), a New York subsidiary of a French company that owns or controls approximately 600 hair salons around the world, conspired to submit, and in fact submitted, more than thirty fraudulent visa applications to the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“INS”).1 The visa applications fraudulently sought Ll-A visas for hairdressers that JDI brought to the United States to staff a nationwide chain of new hair salons. To satisfy the requirements for Ll-A visas, the applications falsely represented that the applicants would hold management positions at JDI in New York.

In April 1996, the INS began a criminal investigation of JDI, which led to an October 1997 INS raid on a Dallas-based JDI franchisee, followed by the arrests of several hairdressers employed there. Shortly afterward, JDI asked Deutsch & Salberg to turn over all of its immigration files. JDI made this request through Yves Anthonioz, its senior representative in the United States.

In May 1998, the month before Deutsch & Salberg returned the files to JDI, [62]*62Deutsch removed certain incriminating documents from the client files and inserted certain exculpatory ones, which he fabricated. Three phoney handwritten letters bearing Deutsch’s signature, and purportedly written over a two year period prior to the October 1997 Dallas raid, were addressed to Yves Anthonioz, and supplied innocent explanations for Deutsch’s role in the submission of false visa applications — explanations that were keyed to the charges being investigated by the INS.

II.

Deutsch “bears a heavy burden” in seeking to overturn his witness tampering and obstruction of justice convictions based on insufficiency of the evidence. United States v. Kinney, 211 F.3d 13, 16 (2d Cir.2000) (citation omitted).

When a defendant challenges the sufficiency of the evidence underlying his conviction, we review the evidence in the light most favorable to the government, drawing all possible inferences in favor of the prosecution____ The ultimate question is not whether we believe the evidence adduced at trial established defendant’s guilt beyond a reasonable doubt but whether any rational trier of fact could so find.

United States v. Payton, 159 F.3d 49, 55-56 (2d Cir.1998).

1. Witness Tampering

Title 18, U.S.C. § 1512(b) provides, in relevant part:

Whoever knowingly ... engages in misleading conduct towards another person, with intent to—
(1) influence, delay, or prevent the testimony of any person in an official proceeding; ... [or]
(3) hinder, delay, or prevent the communication to a law enforcement officer or judge of the United States of information relating to the commission ... of a Federal offense [shall be guilty of a crime],

Deutsch argues that he could not have engaged in “misleading conduct” towards Anthonioz because Anthonioz, with whom Deutsch had dealt throughout his firm’s representation of JDI, knew that the backdated, handwritten letters were fake.

The government identified JDI, not Anthonioz, as the witness with whom Deutsch tampered. The jury could reasonably have concluded that Deutsch submitted the phoney letters to JDI with the intent of influencing JDI’s future grand jury testimony or communications to federal investigators. See United States v. Gabriel, 125 F.3d 89, 103 (2d Cir.1997) (“[T]he government was required to prove only that [the defendant] endeavored corruptly to persuade or mislead [the witness] with the intent of influencing [the witness’s] potential testimony before a grand jury.”). Even if Anthonioz may not have been deceived into thinking he had actually received the phoney letters, JDI could have been tricked into believing that the letters were real. Deutsch could expect that JDI would act through counsel in producing documents or in response to official inquiry, and that JDI, acting through its criminal defense attorney, would not realize that documents in the file of the client’s lawyer were fabricated. This is precisely the theory that the government advanced (and the jury evidently accepted) during its closing argument:

[T]here was a reasonable possibility that [Deutsch’s] efforts to mislead Dessange to thinking he [Deutsch] actually sent those letters to Yves Anthonioz might work ... By making them and pawning off the documents to Jacques Dessange, [63]*63Deutsch intended to trick the corporation into thinking that the documents were real so that in the event the corporation was subpoenaed, that is, asked to testify, they would produce those documents as actual documents they received.

This possibility — that JDI could have been fooled into thinking that Deutsch’s phoney letters were real — distinguishes this case from United States v. King, 762 F.2d 232 (2d Cir.1985), where we held that an attempt by an accused to persuade a witness to lie in order to mislead the government is not an offense under § 1512(b). Deutsch never asked JDI (or, for that matter, Anthonioz) to say something they knew to be false. Rather, he fabricated exculpatory letters and inserted them in his client’s file as if they were genuine documents. The jury could reasonably have found that Deutsch engaged in this conduct with the intent to influence JDI’s potential testimony or future interactions with law enforcement.

2. Obstruction of Justice

The federal obstruction of justice statute makes it unlawful to “corruptly ...

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4 F. App'x 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jacques-dessange-inc-ca2-2001.