United States v. Lawrence Salvatore Iorizzo

786 F.2d 52, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 23123
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedMarch 11, 1986
Docket85-1094
StatusPublished
Cited by92 cases

This text of 786 F.2d 52 (United States v. Lawrence Salvatore Iorizzo) 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. Lawrence Salvatore Iorizzo, 786 F.2d 52, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 23123 (2d Cir. 1986).

Opinion

WINTER, Circuit Judge: •

Lawrence S. Iorizzo appeals from various convictions by two juries before Judge Altimari in the Eastern District of New York. Iorizzo was charged in a sixteen count indictment with mail and wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341, 1343 (1982), as well as with the interstate transportation of stolen property, 18 U.S.C. § 2314 (1982). These charges arose out of his activities as president and principal owner of Vantage Petroleum Corporation (“Vantage”) and various affiliated companies he owned or controlled. There were three categories of counts. Counts 1-5 were dismissed before trial on the government’s motion and no longer concern us. Counts 6-13, alleging mail fraud, concerned a scheme to defraud New York State out of gasoline excise and sales taxes from June, 1979 to August, 1981. Counts 14-16 alleged wire fraud and the interstate transportation of stolen property. They concerned a scheme in which the defendant allegedly defrauded Ashland Petroleum Company out of more than $500,000 of gasoline during the period January-February 1982 and caused some of that gasoline to be transported from New Jersey to New York.

The trial of the mail fraud counts (6-13) was severed from that of the Ashland counts (14-16), the former being held in April, 1984J the latter in June of the same year. Defendant was represented by the same attorney in both trials. In the first trial, the jury returned guilty verdicts on all eight counts. The second trial resulted in one conviction and one acquittal on the wire fraud counts, and a conviction on the interstate transportation count. Iorizzo was sentenced to concurrent five-year terms of imprisonment and a five-year term of probation, and ordered to pay $19,000 in fines and approximately $1.7 million in restitution.

Finding that Iorizzo did not have the assistance of a counsel free from conflicts *54 of interest that affected the trial, we reverse the mail fraud convictions and remand. We reverse the wire fraud conviction and dismiss this count because of the lack of a nexus between the use of the wires and the fraudulent scheme. We find no error in the conviction for interstate transportation of stolen property but remand for further proceedings to determine the applicability of United States v. Cancilla, 725 F.2d 867 (2d Cir.1984).

I. THE MAIL FRAUD CONVICTIONS

The scheme to evade state gasoline taxes involved use of the mails to file allegedly fraudulent New York State excise and sales tax returns. As a motor fuel distributor licensed by New York State, Vantage was required to prepare and file such returns. The amount of tax owed was determined by subtracting Vantage’s closing inventory for the relevant period from its opening inventory, with certain adjustments of no relevance to this appeal. The statutory rate was then applied to this amount.

The government sought to prove that Iorizzo caused Vantage’s tax liability to be minimized by periodically inflating the closing inventory figures and thus reducing reported sales. The government’s key witness in this regard was James Tietz, a supervisor in Vantage’s accounting department who was principally responsible for preparing tax returns for Vantage and various affiliated companies. He testified that he was instructed by Iorizzo to manipulate sales and inventory figures so as to match the companies’ tax liability with the amount of discretionary cash the firms had available for the payment of taxes. According to his testimony, Tietz had misgivings about his conduct, despite Iorizzo’s assurances that the unpaid taxes would be made up later, and at times refused to sign the false returns. He also testified that he and an associate embezzled funds from Vantage by cashing paychecks issued to non-existent employees but that Iorizzo agreed not to pursue the matter so long as Tietz resumed signing the false state tax forms.

Tietz’s relationship to Iorizzo’s defense counsel gives rise to a major issue on this appeal. In 1981, New York authorities were investigating Vantage’s and the affiliated corporations’ compliance with the gasoline excise and sales tax. Tietz and two other employees of these corporations were subpoenaed and testified under oath at a hearing before the State Tax Commission. At that hearing, they were represented by the same attorney who served as Iorizzo’s defense counsel at the trials that are the subject of the present appeal. Events at the mail fraud trial suggest that Iorizzo paid the lawyer to represent these witnesses. Tietz’s testimony at the prior hearing pertained to his role in preparing and filing certain sales and payroll tax returns for Vantage and certain of the affiliated companies. Although the testimony before the Tax Commission did not cover exactly the same period of time as the indictment, there was overlap. Tietz’s testimony on that occasion in no way either admitted the falsity of the returns or implicated Iorizzo in a scheme to file false returns.

The potential conflict of interest arising from defense counsel’s role as Iorizzo’s advocate at the mail fraud trial and his earlier representation of the government’s key witness in a related state proceeding was evident to the prosecution prior to trial. At a pretrial proceeding, the government, through a New York state prosecutor specially deputized to try this case, raised the issue of whether defense counsel was disqualified. He told the district court:

Any doubt that may have existed before as to a conflict or any shadow has been removed by [defense counsel]. He chose to represent Mr. Tietz at that time, he chooses to represent Mr. Iorizzo now. If he gathered any confidential information ... which he intends to use at trial, I think there’s a conflict. I think the government has certain rights when there is a conflict among attorneys and I *55 think this is now highlighted and respectfully I think the Court is forced to rule now whether [defense counsel] can continue representing this client if this matter is critical. Mr. Tietz will be a witness subject to cross-examination.

The court instructed the government that in the event it chose to pursue the disqualification issue, it must do so in writing. The prosecutors failed to make a written objection, however.

During his opening statement at trial, defense counsel promised to show the jury that the government’s case was “based almost entirely on the testimony of a thief, a liar and a forgerer — one James Tietz.” During Tietz’s extended cross-examination, defense counsel asked him whether he remembered testifying before the State Tax Commission. Counsel for the government immediately asked for a sidebar conference at which they strenuously objected to any cross-examination regarding Tietz’s earlier testimony. The grounds stated by the deputized prosecutor were that any cross-examination of the witness “about testimony ... where he represented him ... is completely improper.” The regular Assistant United States Attorney, a prosecutor with considerable experience, told the district judge, “[T]his is the clearest conflict I have ever seen.”

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Bluebook (online)
786 F.2d 52, 1986 U.S. App. LEXIS 23123, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-lawrence-salvatore-iorizzo-ca2-1986.