United States v. Jerry Jarrett

447 F.3d 520, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 11433, 2006 WL 1230332
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedMay 9, 2006
Docket05-2844
StatusPublished
Cited by36 cases

This text of 447 F.3d 520 (United States v. Jerry Jarrett) 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. Jerry Jarrett, 447 F.3d 520, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 11433, 2006 WL 1230332 (7th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

EVANS, Circuit Judge.

Jerry Jarrett is an aggressive and successful criminal defense attorney from northern Indiana. Jarrett, however, has not always limited his services to representing accused clients. On at least two occasions, according to a jury that found him guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, he helped drug dealers launder money produced by their illegal enterprises. And for those activities he came to the attention of federal prosecutors, which eventually led to the jury that heard his case.

After he was tried and convicted for money laundering and illegally structuring financial transactions, Jarrett moved to have his indictment tossed out, claiming he was the victim of a vindictive prosecution. Jarrett argued that the government only came after him because he succeeded in getting state murder charges dismissed against a client who was the target of a highly publicized, joint federal-state investigation. In a lengthy and detailed opinion, the district court (the venerable Judge William C. Lee presiding) found that Jarrett was vindictively prosecuted. Upon that finding, the court vacated the jury verdict and dismissed the charges. The government, hoping to revive the jury’s verdict, appeals.

Jarrett, it is alleged, began cleaning up dirty money in April 1999, when a drug dealer named Carlos Ripoll brought him $67,000 in cash. Jarrett deposited the money in a series of small transactions (to evade currency transaction reports) into the bank account of a dormant small busi *523 ness he controlled. 1 Jarrett then prepared a backdated stock purchase agreement, representing that Ripoll had “invested” $15,000 in Jarrett’s company, and issued a series of checks to Ripoll totaling $54,452 for “return on investment.” As compensation for his services, Jarrett pocketed $12,000.

Beginning in September 1999, Jarrett executed a similar series of sham transactions with a cocaine dealer named Gregory Goode, laundering $25,000 in drug money and keeping a $7,000 profit.

Three months later, Ripoll was arrested and quickly began talking to the government. Among other things, he described his financial dealings with Jarrett, telling investigators that Jarrett was aware that he was handling drug money. Ripoll also described his drug dealings with Goode.

A federal grand jury subpoenaed Jarrett to testify in December 1999. Jarrett was designated as a fact witness, not a target, and fully cooperated. He produced records of his financial dealings with Ripoll and Goode but denied any knowledge that the money he received had come from drugs. (He said Ripoll and Goode told him that the money came from gambling winnings, selling cars, and rehabbing houses.)

In late 2000, after Goode was arrested, he gave a sworn proffer to the government in anticipation of plea negotiations. Goode, who at the time was represented by an attorney Jarrett told him to hire, said Jarrett cleaned up a small amount of his money. However, he was equivocal about whether Jarrett knew the money came from drug dealing. In the proffer, Goode lied about his own drug-dealing activities and, according to a statement given a few years later, about the amount of money he gave Jarrett. The plea negotiations fell apart, and nothing came of the proffer. After he was tried and convicted of conspiracy to distribute cocaine and money laundering, Goode fired the lawyer who was recommended by Jarrett.

Although it apparently had enough evidence to indict him, the government let its investigation of Jarrett lay dormant throughout 2001 and 2002. Prosecutors said they were unwilling to go to trial with only the testimony of one convicted criminal — Ripoll—to establish Jarrett’s knowledge that the cash he deposited came from drug proceeds.

In January 2003, the U.S. Attorney’s office (USAO) for the Northern District of Indiana again approached Goode, this time through the new attorney who was representing him on appeal. The attorney had been appointed by the court and thus, unlike Goode’s trial counsel, had no ties to Jarrett. This time the two sides struck a deal, and 2 months later Goode changed his story from his 2000 proffer and told a grand jury that Jarrett did indeed know that the money they exchanged came from selling drugs. The grand jury knew Goode was a convicted felon (he testified in his prison jumpsuit) and thus could weigh the consideration that his testimony might not be completely credible. However, the government did not tell the grand jury that Goode was testifying as part of a deal that would reduce his 15-1/2-year sentence. Ripoll’s earlier statements about *524 Jarrett were presented in hearsay form. With Goode’s testimony in hand, the government notified Jarrett in May 2003 that he was the target of a grand jury investigation for money laundering.

Meanwhile, Jarrett was busy with the headline-grabbing case of Dr. Jong Hi Bek. In July 2002, authorities capped a long-running, joint federal-state investigation by raiding the Gary clinic where Bek was prescribing painkillers and other controlled substances to drug addicts. Lake County (Indiana) prosecutors charged Bek with felony murder for the deaths of two of his clients. Federal prosecutors also charged him with illegally distributing controlled substances; they later dismissed this complaint so the state case could proceed, but about the same time filed a federal civil forfeiture action.

As Bek’s attorney, Jarrett moved in September 2002 to compel disclosure of the state’s expert witnesses, who would be needed to establish that Bek’s prescriptions actually caused the two patients’ deaths. After some foot-dragging, the state admitted in March 2003 that it lacked conclusive toxicology evidence against Bek, and a month later it voluntarily dismissed the murder charges. This was an embarrassment for the Lake County prosecutors, given the public attention the Bek investigation had generated.

Four months later, federal prosecutors reindicted Bek for illegal drug distribution and other charges. Since Jarrett, who was still serving as Bek’s attorney, was the target of a separate criminal investigation into the money-laundering scheme, the government urged the district judge in the Bek case to disqualify him, arguing that an attorney facing his own legal problems with federal prosecutors might have a conflict of interest that would keep him from rendering effective assistance to his client. The court determined that Bek understood the potential problem but still wanted to keep Jarrett. as his attorney. 2

In October 2003, IRS investigators recommended charges against Jarrett. In December 2003, 4 years after Jarrett first testified about his activities with Ripoll and Goode, a grand jury indicted him on six counts of money laundering and illegal structuring.

With this factual background established, Jarrett’s argument can be succinctly summarized: He had a legal right and duty to provide a vigorous defense for his client, Dr. Bek. Because he had succeeded in getting the state’s felony-murder charges dismissed, he embarrassed not only Lake County officials but also their federal partners in the Bek investigation— namely, the U.S. Attorney’s office.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
447 F.3d 520, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 11433, 2006 WL 1230332, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-jerry-jarrett-ca7-2006.