United States v. Joseph R. Lennon

814 F.2d 185, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 4973
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedMarch 31, 1987
Docket86-2175
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 814 F.2d 185 (United States v. Joseph R. Lennon) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth 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. Joseph R. Lennon, 814 F.2d 185, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 4973 (5th Cir. 1987).

Opinion

W. EUGENE DAVIS, Circuit Judge:

Joseph R. Lennon appeals his conviction for having violated the National Stolen Property Act. 18 U.S.C. § 2314. We affirm.

I.

The facts of this case were fully developed in Lennon’s first appeal, United States v. Lennon, 751 F.2d 737 (5th Cir.1985), but we will briefly summarize them here. Joseph R. Lennon was the manager of crude oil supply for Charter International Oil Company (Charter). Lennon controlled Charter’s purchases of crude oil, and he directed the company to make periodic purchases from Southwest Petrochem, Inc. (Petrochem), owned by Milton Jones. In return for arranging these purchases, Lennon extracted a kickback from Jones varying in price from $.10 to $.20 per barrel purchased. Lennon instructed Jones to pay the kickback to either H & L Enterprises or Harlen Trading Company, companies owned fifty percent by Lennon and fifty percent by his business partner, James Harrigan. In one instance, Jones paid a kickback to Lennon’s sole proprietorship named LATCO. The evidence indicated that the kickbacks totaled $1,193,000.

Lennon was charged in an eight-count indictment with causing the interstate transportation of certain checks knowing that certain proceeds of each check were obtained by fraud in violation of the National Stolen Property Act. 18 U.S.C. §§ 2314, 2(b). The proof at trial showed that the checks from Charter to Petrochem traveled in interstate commerce while the kickbacks from Jones to Lennon’s companies did not. The government’s theory focused on the Charter checks themselves, and sought to prove that the amount of each check was inflated by the amount of the kickback Jones would ultimately pay to Lennon’s companies.

In 1983, a jury convicted Lennon on all counts in a trial before the Honorable Carl O. Bue, Jr. The court fined Lennon $70,-000 and sentenced him to serve four years in prison. We reversed Lennon’s conviction because of an erroneous jury instruction, Lennon, 751 F.2d at 743-44, and the case was retried. The district court amended its jury instructions to conform to our *187 previous panel opinion. The jury convicted Lennon and he was given the same sentence. This appeal followed.

II.

The crux of Lennon’s defense is that his activities do not fall within the narrow strictures of the National Stolen Property Act. The Act imposes criminal penalties on anyone who:

transports in interstate ... commerce any goods, wares, merchandise, securities or money, of the value of $5,000 or more, knowing the same to have been stolen, converted or taken by fraud.

18 U.S.C. § 2314 (emphasis added). Lennon argues for a strict interpretation of the statute’s requirement that what is transported in interstate commerce be “the same” as what is “taken by fraud.”

In the instant case, the items transported in interstate commerce were securities, in the form of checks, that were drawn by Charter and made payable to Petrochem. The amount of each Charter check was fraudulently inflated by Lennon in order to finance the ultimate kickback from Jones to Lennon’s companies. 1 Each Charter check therefore contained both legitimate funds designed to pay for crude oil and fraudulently obtained funds designed to finance kickbacks. Although each Charter check traveled in interstate commerce, only the kickback portion of each Charter check was “taken by fraud”; 2 the remainder was legitimately used to purchase crude oil. Lennon therefore argues that the Act does not apply because each Charter check that traveled in interstate commerce was not precisely “the same” as the kickback portion of the check that was “taken by fraud.” We refuse to adopt such a narrow interpretation of the Act.

Lennon principally relies on Dowling v. United States, 473 U.S. 207, 215, 105 S.Ct. 3127, 3132, 87 L.Ed.2d 152, 159 (1985), in which the Supreme Court reversed a convic *188 tion under Section 2314 for the interstate shipment of bootleg sound recordings and motion pictures whose unauthorized distribution infringed valid copyrights. Dowling’s section 2314 conviction rested on his unauthorized use of the copyrights, not on any allegation that he unlawfully possessed their physical embodiment in sound recordings and motion pictures. Id. at 215 n. 7, 105 S.Ct. at 3132 n. 7, 87 L.Ed.2d at 159 n. 7. The Court reversed the conviction because “Congress had no intention to reach copyright infringement when it enacted § 2314.” Id. at 226, 105 S.Ct. at 3138, 87 L.Ed.2d at 166.

Lennon cites Dowling for a different proposition. To support his argument that the kickback portion of each Charter check was not “the same” as the checks themselves, Lennon cites the following passage from Dowling:

The courts interpreting § 2314 have never required, of course, that the items stolen and transported remain in entirely unaltered form. Nor does it matter that the item owes a major portion of its value to an intangible component. But these cases and others prosecuted under § 2314 have always involved physical “goods, wares, [or] merchandise” that have themselves been “stolen, converted or taken by fraud.” This basic element comports with the commonsense meaning of the statutory language: by requiring that the “goods, wares, [or] merchandise” be “the same” as those “stolen, converted or taken by fraud,” the provision seems clearly to contemplate a physical identity between the items unlawfully obtained and those eventually transported, and hence some prior physical taking of the subject goods.

Id. at 216, 105 S.Ct. at 3133, 87 L.Ed.2d at 159-60 (citations omitted) (emphasis added). Lennon argues that his conviction should be reversed because there is no “physical identity” between the checks that traveled in interstate commerce and the kickback portion that was “taken by fraud.” We disagree for two reasons.

First, we interpret the Court’s admonition that the statute contemplates “a physical identity between the items unlawfully obtained and those eventually transported” as distinguishing intangible rights, such as copyright, from the physical items the statute seeks to regulate, such as goods, wares, merchandise, securities or money. 3 The instant case presents no such question of coverage. On the contrary, the statute expressly reaches “securities,” the definition of which indisputably includes the Charter checks at issue.

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Bluebook (online)
814 F.2d 185, 1987 U.S. App. LEXIS 4973, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-joseph-r-lennon-ca5-1987.