United States v. Kay

359 F.3d 738, 2004 WL 223918
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 5, 2004
Docket02-20588
StatusPublished
Cited by85 cases

This text of 359 F.3d 738 (United States v. Kay) 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. Kay, 359 F.3d 738, 2004 WL 223918 (5th Cir. 2004).

Opinion

*740 WIENER, Circuit Judge:

Plaintiff-appellant, the United States of America (“government”) appeals the district court’s grant of the motion of defendants-appellees David Kay and Douglas Murphy (“defendants”) to dismiss the Superseding Indictment 1 (“indictment”) that charged them with bribery of foreign officials in violation of the Foreign Corrupt Practices Act (“FCPA”). 2 In their dismissal motion, defendants contended that the indictment failed to state an offense against them. The principal dispute in this case is whether, if proved beyond a reasonable doubt, the conduct that the indictment ascribed to defendants in connection with the alleged bribery of Haitian officials to understate customs duties and sales taxes on rice shipped to Haiti to assist American Rice, Inc. in obtaining or retaining business was sufficient to constitute an offense under the FCPA. Underlying this question of sufficiency of the contents of the indictment is the preliminary task of ascertaining the scope of the FCPA, which in turn requires us to construe the statute.

The district court concluded that, as a matter of law, an indictment alleging illicit payments to foreign officials for the purpose of avoiding substantial portions of customs duties and sales taxes to obtain or retain business are not the kind of bribes that the FCPA criminalizes. We disagree with this assessment of the scope of the FCPA and hold that such bribes could (but do not necessarily) come within the ambit of the statute. Concluding in the end that the indictment in this case is sufficient to state an offense under the FCPA, we remand the instant case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. Nevertheless, on remand the defendants may choose to submit a motion asking the district court to compel the government to allege more specific facts regarding the intent element of an FCPA crime that requires the defendant to intend for the foreign official’s anticipated conduct in consideration of a bribe (hereafter, the “quid pro quo”) to produce an anticipated result — here, diminution of duties and taxes — that would assist (or is meant to assist) in obtaining or retaining business (hereafter, the “business nexus element”). If so, the trial court will need to decide whether (1) merely quoting or paraphrasing the statute as to that element (as was done here) is sufficient, or (2) the government must allege additional facts as to just what business was sought to be obtained or retained in Haiti and just how the intended quid pro quo was meant to assist in obtaining or retaining such business. We therefore reverse the district court’s dismissal of the indictment and remand for further consistent proceedings.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

American Rice, Inc. (“ARI”) is a Houston-based company that exports rice to foreign countries, including Haiti. Rice Corporation of Haiti (“RCH”), a wholly owned subsidiary of ARI, was incorporated in Haiti to represent ARI’s interests and deal with third parties there. As an aspect of Haiti’s standard importation procedure, its customs officials assess duties based on the quantity and value of rice imported into the country. Haiti also requires businesses that deliver rice there to remit an advance deposit against Haitian sales taxes, based on the value of that rice, for which deposit a credit is eventually allowed on Haitian sales tax returns when filed.

*741 In 2001, a grand jury charged Kay with violating the FCPA and subsequently returned the indictment, which charges both Kay and Murphy with 12 counts of FCPA violations. As is readily apparent on its face, the indictment contains detailed factual allegations about (1) the timing and purposes of Congress’s enactment of the FCPA, (2) ARI and its status as an “issuer” under the FCPA, (3) RCH and its status as a wholly owned subsidiary and “service corporation” of ARI, representing ARI’s interest in Haiti, and (4) defendants’ citizenship, their positions as officers of ARI, and their status as “issuers” and “domestic concerns” under the FCPA. The indictment also spells out in detail how Kay and Murphy allegedly orchestrated the bribing of Haitian customs officials to accept false bills of lading and other documentation that intentionally understated by one-third the quantity of rice shipped to Haiti, thereby significantly reducing ARI’s customs duties and sales taxes. In this regard, the indictment alleges the details of the bribery scheme’s machinations, including the preparation of duplicate documentation, the calculation of bribes as a percentage of the value of the rice not reported, the surreptitious payment of monthly retainers to Haitian officials, and the defendants’ purported authorization of withdrawals of funds from ARI’s bank accounts with which to pay the Haitian officials, either directly or through intermediaries — all to produce substantially reduced Haitian customs and tax costs to ARI. Further, the indictment alleges discrete facts regarding ARI’s domestic incorporation and place of business, as well as the particular instrumentalities of interstate and foreign commerce that defendants used or caused to be used in carrying out the purported bribery.

In contrast, without any factual allegations, the indictment merely paraphrases the one element of the statute that is central to this appeal, only conclusionally accusing defendants of causing payments to be made to Haitian customs officials:

for purposes of influencing acts and decisions of such foreign officials in their official capacities, inducing such foreign officials to do and omit to do acts in violation of their lawful duty, and to obtain an improper advantage, in order to assist American Rice, Inc. in obtaining and retaining business for, and directing business to American Rice, Inc. and Rice Corporation of Haiti. (Emphasis added).

Although it recites in great detail the discrete facts that the government intends to prove to satisfy each other element of an FCPA violation, the indictment recites no particularized facts that, if proved, would satisfy the “assist” aspect of the business nexus element of the statute, i.e., the nexus between the illicit tax savings produced by the bribery and the assistance such savings provided or were intended to provide in obtaining or retaining business for ARI and RCH. Neither does the indictment contain any factual allegations whatsoever to identify just what business in Haiti (presumably some rice-related commercial activity) the illicit customs and tax savings assisted (or were intended to assist) in obtaining or retaining, or just how these savings were supposed to assist in such efforts. In other words, the indictment recites no facts that could demonstrate an actual or intended cause-and-effect nexus between reduced taxes and obtaining identified business or retaining identified business opportunities.

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Bluebook (online)
359 F.3d 738, 2004 WL 223918, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-kay-ca5-2004.