United States v. Mitchell Antar, in 94-5228. United States of America v. Eddie Antar, in 94-5230

53 F.3d 568, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 8083
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedApril 12, 1995
Docket94-5228 and 94-5230
StatusPublished
Cited by122 cases

This text of 53 F.3d 568 (United States v. Mitchell Antar, in 94-5228. United States of America v. Eddie Antar, in 94-5230) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third 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. Mitchell Antar, in 94-5228. United States of America v. Eddie Antar, in 94-5230, 53 F.3d 568, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 8083 (3d Cir. 1995).

Opinion

GREENBERG, Circuit Judge.

The final judgments of sentence and conviction from which the defendants appealed marked the culmination of a decades-long rise and fall of an electronics retail chain called Crazy Eddie and the family that ran the company. When all was said and done, the saga involved: a New York-based chain which achieved enormous success over the past few decades in large part due to the company’s aggressive advertising; an alleged behind the scenes sophisticated family-run conspiracy to operate Crazy Eddie in an unlawful manner, which allegedly netted the defendants millions of dollars; a series of rancorous intrafamily disputes — both business and personal — which wound up, tragically, in an in camera conference during the criminal trial centering around whether a defendant’s presence at his daughter’s funeral would be helpful or hurtful to the family; the flight of a defendant to Israel and his ultimate return to this country to stand trial; and a lengthy high-profile criminal ease resulting in a prison term of more than ten years and a $121 million restitution order against the best-known defendant.

I. Factual Background and Procedural History 1

The Crazy Eddie, Inc. chain of consumer electronics stores began as a small operation in the 1970s and in a fairly short time grew into a major New York area consumer retail chain with stores in four states and with reported annual sales totalling over $300 million. Crazy Eddie began as a family-controlled operation with Eddie Antar as the key figure. At the relevant times, Eddie 2 was the company’s president and chairman of the board, though in December 1986, he resigned as president. Eddie’s younger brother Mitchell Antar worked for many years at Crazy Eddie and then was appointed • vice-president in charge of purchasing and became a member of the board of directors in May 1984. Mitchell subsequently became one of three members of Crazy Eddie’s “Office of the President.” On June 5, 1987, Mitchell resigned from all his positions at the company, but did not divest himself of Crazy Eddie stock.

On September 13, 1984, Crazy Eddie conducted an initial public offering (“IPO”) of its stock. Originally sold at $8 per share, by 1986 the stock was trading at over $75 per share. So by all appearances, investors in Crazy Eddie had discovered a gold mine. However, according to the indictment ultimately returned, behind the scenes the defendants were manipulating the books and falsifying financial statements which rendered the optimistic appearances misleading. The scheme allegedly began between 1980 and 1983, when Eddie and other defendants engaged in an unlawful practice called “cash *571 skimming.” Cash- skimming involves keeping certain cash receipts off the books so that it can be put to tax-free personal use. The defendants soon decided to curtail the cash-skimming in preparation for the IPO, because suddenly putting more profits on the books would cause potential investors to believe that the company experienced an exponential growth in earnings. In reality, though, by manipulating the profits entered on the books, the defendants artificially fostered a false appearance of growth. These activities resulted in the filing of a false financial statement with the Securities and Exchange Commission.

The indictment alleges that during the next few years, Eddie directed employees to inflate year-end inventory figures, and to falsify the company’s books to improve the financial information it would report to the SEC. This conduct enabled the defendants to conduct successful second and third public offerings of stock. The various defendants allegedly committed other, similar fraudulent acts during this time period. By the end of 1986, the company had begun to lose money, but, the government alleges, the defendants still continued to fabricate Crazy Eddie’s financial statements. In May 1987, Eddie attempted, through the initiation of a tender offer, to buy back the company’s shares and take it private. In June 1987, Elias Zinn of Entertainment Marketing, Inc. launched a competing tender offer. Eddie’s tender offer failed, and while Zinn withdrew his competing offer, he also began a proxy fight in cooperation with the Oppenheimer-Palmieri Fund to take over the board. Their proxy fight became successful on November 6, 1987. After taking control, Zinn and the Fund took a physical count of the company’s inventory, only to find that inventory valued on its books at about $46 million was missing.

In August 1987, the SEC began an investigation into the alleged fraud at Cra2y Eddie. The indictment alleges that upon learning of this, Eddie and others attempted to destroy damaging records to conceal the extent of their fraud. Ultimately, though, on September 6,1989, the SEC filed a civil action in the United States District Court for the District of New Jersey, alleging that Eddie and several others on a number of occasions had falsified Crazy Eddie’s financial statements. Upon motion by the SEC, the district court preliminarily enjoined Eddie from making any false statements in connection with securities filings. Additionally, the court ordered that:

[Defendant Eddie Antar shall transfer all assets, funds or other property representing or derived from the $43,989,640.38 transferred to Bank Leumi Israel on or about February 17,1987, or from the funds in the aggregate amount of $8,367,325.25 transferred to Bank Leumi Israel on or about November 27, 1987, December 3, 1987, December 15, 1987, and January 21, 1987, 3 presently held in foreign locations in the name of Eddie Antar, for his benefit, under his control or over which he exercises actual investment or other authority, to be held and invested in accordance with such instructions as the Court may issue upon notice to the parties.

SEC v. Antar, No. 89-3773, January 24,1990 Order at app. 1063 (the repatriation order). 4 Eddie failed to comply with the order — asserting his Fifth Amendment privilege against self-incrimination — even after the court granted him extensions of time to comply. Finally the court issued an order to show cause why he should not be held in contempt. On February 9, 1990, the district court entered an order finding that “Eddie Antar did not comply with the Court’s order for the transfer of assets” and that his “failure to comply with the Court’s order is willful and contumacious.” App. 1065. Thus, the court held him in contempt, and ordered' him incarcerated until he complied with the repatriation order. Eddie appeared before a different district judge in order to purge the contempt, and at that hearing agreed to appear before the district court on February 27, 1990. He did not appear on that date, *572 and, as it subsequently became known, he fled the country.

On April 6, 1990, the court ordered that Eddie’s answer to the SEC’s complaint be stricken and four days later it entered an order of default against him. In response to a motion by the SEC, the court on June 29, 1990 determined that “(1) Eddie Antar made illegal profits of $52,519,548 from the sale of the stock of Crazy Eddie, Inc.

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Bluebook (online)
53 F.3d 568, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 8083, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mitchell-antar-in-94-5228-united-states-of-america-v-ca3-1995.