United States v. Louis Benedict Gwin, A/K/A Bill Red Cloud

839 F.2d 427, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 1834, 1988 WL 10615
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 17, 1988
Docket87-5257
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 839 F.2d 427 (United States v. Louis Benedict Gwin, A/K/A Bill Red Cloud) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth 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. Louis Benedict Gwin, A/K/A Bill Red Cloud, 839 F.2d 427, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 1834, 1988 WL 10615 (8th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

LAY, Chief Judge.

Louis Benedict Gwin a/k/a Bill Red Cloud was convicted in federal district court 1 on two counts of embezzling money of the United States Government in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 641 (1982). 2 He received concurrent sentences of two years imprisonment and was ordered to make restitution in the amount of $9,973. On appeal Gwin asserts inter alia that the evidence was insufficient to establish that any money taken by Gwin was property “of the United States.” Gwin also raises other issues relating to the jury instructions, the use of an uncounseled conviction, and the multiplicitous nature of the indictment. *428 Each of these issues raises serious questions which we need not resolve; we agree with Gwin that the undisputed proof demonstrates that the monies involved were not property of the government under section 641. We conclude the government’s proof demonstrates only that Gwin was a debtor of the government and cannot be guilty of embezzling government monies.

According to the government’s evidence, in 1983 Gwin approached officers of the Indian Health Service (IHS), an agency of the United States, and offered to dispose of their exposed and obsolete X-ray film in the area of Aberdeen, South Dakota, and reclaim the silver for salvage value. According to their agreement, the defendant would obtain the film from the several hospitals and service units in the Aberdeen area, reclaim the silver therefrom, and then pay IHS for the film by remitting the proceeds to Picker International X-ray Company (Picker) a supplier of X-ray film for IHS. The payment procedure was devised because if IHS received the proceeds directly it would have to turn the proceeds over to the United States Treasury. IHS officials evidently approved the procedure so that the IHS could be given credit on its account with Picker for the purchase of new X-ray film. 3

Written evidence of the arrangement is provided by two documents. The first document is a letter Gwin wrote in December of 1982 to officials of the IHS at Aberdeen. The government in its brief concedes: “The agreement was memorialized by a proposal from Red Cloud * * Appellee’s Brief at 2 (emphasis added). The letter reads in part as follows:

I ask that this letter serve as my letter of intent to purchase all available used x-ray film in your area. It is my intent to purchase the film and have it reprocessed to remove the precious metals. I offer to purchase the film in large quanitites [sic] and pay your department a sum to be determined based on the daily silver market prices on the date of delivery to the processor.

Addendum Exhibit B (emphasis added). The government argues that the value to Gwin of the excess and obsolete X-ray film was to be negotiated in the future. On May 16, 1983, Curt Smith, IHS Radiology Consultant, wrote to all radiology branches. The letter reads in part:

The Area Office has decided to sell all of our old x-rays and silver reclaiming canisters in return for credit through Picker International X-ray Company to purchase x-ray like items from the proceedes [sic]. Mr. Bill Red Cloud who represents Delta Refining Company, will hire local help in purging the old x-rays for recycling under the supervision of the x-ray technologists. All weights will be recorded on site and forwarded to my office for a permanent record. We will receive the dollar amount based on the daily silver market value per troy once [sic] on the day of delivery to the processor.

Addendum Exhibit C (emphasis added).

No formal contract was drawn up setting out exactly what Gwin was to pay Picker after reclamation of the silver or what portion of the proceeds received would be retained by Gwin as his profit.

During the late spring and summer of 1983, Gwin travelled to various IHS facilities to pick up the outdated film. Gwin *429 sold the film he acquired to Tri-State Refining Company (Tri-State) of Sioux Falls, South Dakota on three separate occasions. In July of 1983 while he was collecting X-ray film from the IHS facility at Red Lake, Minnesota, Gwin was arrested by tribal authorities and charged with taking with intent to steal four cartons of new X-ray film. He was subsequently convicted of a misdemeanor in tribal court. On July 29, 1983, two days after his arrest, IHS withdrew from its agreement with Gwin. The record reflects that no money ever reached IHS or its supplier, and that Gwin utilized the proceeds he obtained from the sale of the silver to purchase personal items for himself and his wife.

After negotiations and efforts to obtain an accounting from Gwin were unsuccessful, the government filed this criminal action. The jury determined that the government never parted title with the X-ray film and that the funds received by Gwin were at all times owned by the government and misappropriated by Gwin.

In support of the jury’s verdict, the government urges that Gwin was a bailee for sale, that any money paid to him by Tri-State was in fact government money, and that Gwin’s failure to pay the IHS account at Picker was in fact embezzlement of government funds. The defendant on the other hand urges that he purchased the X-ray film involved and that his purchase price for the film was not to be paid to the government but to Picker for the government’s account. He urges that he occupied the role of a debtor and that his intention was to pay the government from further sales to Tri-State. Under controlling legal standards we fail to find sufficient evidence to sustain the government’s theory that Gwin received the film and the proceeds as a bailee for sale. The undisputed evidence demonstrates only that Gwin purchased the film from the government and agreed to pay a portion of the proceeds from the silver reclamation to Picker as consideration for the film purchased.

The evidence is clear that IHS and Gwin reached no definite understanding as to the amount to be paid to the government. The evidence indicates only that this amount was to be determined based upon the market price of silver and the amount reclaimed. Contrary to the government’s directive, IHS facilities did not keep track of the amount of film provided to Gwin. Gwin voluntarily submitted the quantities of film from his records. No details were agreed upon as to the procedure to be followed by Gwin in reclaiming the silver, nor was there a time for repayment discussed or agreed upon.

To establish that Gwin was in fact a bailee for hire or was acting as a trustee requires more definite proof that the arrangement was not a sale by IHS to Gwin as indicated in the correspondence quoted above. There is no evidence of government control over the film or the funds after delivery to Gwin. Cf. United States v. Perez, 707 F.2d 359 (8th Cir.1983) (theft of government exhibit during trial: sufficient possession and control to be property of the United States); United States v. O’Kelley,

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839 F.2d 427, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 1834, 1988 WL 10615, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-louis-benedict-gwin-aka-bill-red-cloud-ca8-1988.