United States v. Marino

654 F.3d 310, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 17202, 2011 WL 3625087
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Second Circuit
DecidedAugust 18, 2011
DocketDocket 09-1965-cr
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 654 F.3d 310 (United States v. Marino) 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. Marino, 654 F.3d 310, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 17202, 2011 WL 3625087 (2d Cir. 2011).

Opinion

WINTER, Circuit Judge:

Matthew Marino appeals from his sentencing by Judge Robinson, following a plea of guilty to misprision of felony in violation of 18 U.S.C. § 4. The only issue on appeal involves the district court’s order that appellant pay restitution in the amount of $60 million. Appellant argues that the district court’s order of restitution was improper because it relied on events occurring outside the relevant time period and the putative victims’ losses were neither directly nor proximately caused by his actions as required by the Mandatory Victims Restitution Act of 1996 (“MVRA”), 18 U.S.C. § 3663A.

We affirm.

BACKGROUND

Appellant participated in the Bayou Hedge Fund Group (“Bayou”), a classic Ponzi scheme masked as a group of domestic and offshore hedge funds that, when it unraveled in 2005, caused approximately $200 million in investor losses. 1

Samuel Israel III and James G. Marquez opened the original Bayou fund in 1996, with approximately $1 million in capital. Thereafter, they recruited investors to the fund, requiring a minimum investment of $100,000. Israel and Marquez shared responsibility for the fund’s investment strategy and recruiting investors. *312 They hired appellant’s brother, Daniel Marino, a certified public accountant, to keep the fund’s books and to reconcile trading records. The fund retained accounting firm Grant Thornton to act as Bayou’s independent financial auditor.

From the start, Bayou lost money. However, rather than disclose these losses to investors, Israel and Marquez, upon Daniel Marino’s suggestion, remitted a portion of the commissions they earned'on trades to the fund’s investors, thereby creating the illusion that the fund was earning positive returns.

By the end of 1998, the fund had accumulated substantial trading losses and masking the losses with trading commissions was no longer possible. On or about December 30, 1998, Israel, Marquez, and Daniel Marino met to discuss the fund’s losses. They devised a scheme to conceal the losses by firing Grant Thornton as independent auditor and having Daniel Marino prepare and issue sham audits. In 1999, Daniel Marino, with the help of appellant, created a fictitious independent accounting firm, Richmond-Fairfield Associates (“RFA”), which purported to maintain offices in Manhattan.

Thereafter, Israel, Marquez, and Daniel Marino began to draft and mail to investors quarterly and monthly reports indicating fictitious positive rates of returns and inflated accumulated profits. Investors also received annual financial statements that contained inflated rates of return on trading, overstated net asset values, and certifications from RFA that it had audited Bayou’s financial reports.

In reality, however, the fund’s losses continued to mount. Increasingly, Israel and Marquez blamed each other for the losses, and, in January 2001, Marquez was ousted from the fund after a dispute with Daniel Marino. Thereafter, Daniel Marino assumed the role of Bayou’s Chief Financial Officer, where he continued to manage the accounting portion of the fraud, and, through RFA, drafted the fictitious audits and certifications of the fund’s financial reports. For his part, Israel maintained responsibility for all the investment and trading activities of Bayou, including the recruitment of new investors.

Using the fictitious financial returns to claim a profitable track record, Israel and Daniel Marino attracted substantial numbers of new investors to the fund, receiving investment capital in excess of $500 million. Israel and Daniel Marino ultimately closed the original Bayou fund, and opened four domestic hedge funds, as well as two different sets of offshore funds in the Cayman Islands, all under the Bayou banner. They hired additional employees, including traders, accounting personnel, and administrative staff, all while continuing to provide falsified information to Bayou investors.

Appellant’s involvement with Bayou began in 2002, when he was hired as an employee at a salary of $5,000 per month to develop a North Carolina office for the fund’s broker-dealer. By the fall of 2002, appellant was making periodic' trips to Bayou’s office in Connecticut.

In or about 2003, appellant’s salary increased to $10,000 per month, and he began assisting his brother Daniel Marino with private placement investments. These investments — including movie and real estate deals, an international money transferring firm, and a French cable company- — were intended to make up for Bayou’s losses and to provide personal profit to Israel and Daniel Marino. However, none of these investments were ever disclosed to Bayou investors, nor were they the type of investments that Bayou purported to be making with investors’ funds. Although appellant assisted in these pri *313 vate placement investments, he claims to have been unaware that the investments were unauthorized.

In 2003, appellant was tasked with locating new office space for RFA in mid-town Manhattan. Aside from retaining two temporary employees for a short period in the spring of 2003, RFA never had any regular employees, save for appellant. Appellant managed all of RFA’s administrative tasks, including: picking up the mail at RFA’s office; checking RFA’s voice mail messages and reviewing written correspondence from Bayou investors; paying RFA’s bills using RFA’s checkbook; and picking up the phony audited financial statements from the printer and copying them after Daniel Marino signed them on behalf of RFA.

In addition, the record indicates that appellant had at least some direct interaction with Bayou investors. For example, the record includes several emails from appellant to Daniel Marino regarding phone calls and other correspondence from Bayou investors to RFA concerning RFA’s audit of Bayou. In an email dated May 23, 2005, appellant notified Daniel Marino of a phone call from an investment advisor whose “client ... invested in the Bayou Superfund and was wondering whether the audit is almost finished or not,” to which appellant inquired, “Let me know if you want me to call back and provide what time frame the audit will be done.” In another email, dated July 12, 2005, appellant stated: “Call from [investment advis- or to a Bayou client] had a quick question. Asked for a call. Wanted to cheek with you fir[s]t before calling back.” Another email, dated January 20, 2005, indicates that appellant was signing written correspondence on behalf of RFA with Daniel Marino’s permission: “I have a certification letter from [financial advisor] Anchin, Block & Anchin re: Custom Strategy-like last year. Go ahead and sign it?” The record also indicates that appellant, as early as April 10, 2003, was opening annual letters, referred to as “confirmation letters,” that the fund sent to each investor indicating the value of the investor’s position in the fund. Upon receipt of the confirmation letter, the investors signed and returned the letters, thereby confirming their understanding of their account value.

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Bluebook (online)
654 F.3d 310, 2011 U.S. App. LEXIS 17202, 2011 WL 3625087, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-marino-ca2-2011.