United States v. Newell

315 F.3d 510, 60 Fed. R. Serv. 669, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 26339, 2002 WL 31835054
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedDecember 19, 2002
Docket01-60397
StatusPublished
Cited by67 cases

This text of 315 F.3d 510 (United States v. Newell) 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. Newell, 315 F.3d 510, 60 Fed. R. Serv. 669, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 26339, 2002 WL 31835054 (5th Cir. 2002).

Opinion

PATRICK E. HIGGINBOTHAM, Circuit Judge:

Clifford Newell, Kim Gianakos, Darrell Wayne Raley, and Kary Graham were charged in a superceding indictment with mail and wire fraud. In addition, Giana-kos was charged with conspiracy to launder money, Newell and Raley were charged with separate money laundering and conspiracy to commit money laundering offenses, and Newell was also charged with federal tax evasion for the years 1994 through 1996. Raley and Graham were acquitted of all charges, Newell was found guilty on all charges, and Gianakos was convicted of one count of mail fraud.

Newell urges that his attorney, who also represented Raley, manifested an actual conflict of interest during the course of the trial that impaired Newell’s defense. We conclude that although the district court before trial diligently complied with Rule 44(c) of the Federal Rules of Criminal Procedure by warning Newell that conflicts of interest might arise from sharing counsel with Raley, it failed to take action when an actual conflict became clear at trial. 1 We therefore REVERSE Newell’s judgment of conviction and REMAND for a new trial. 2

Gianakos argues that the district court erred in overruling her objections to two pieces of evidence, as well as to portions of the prosecutor’s closing argument and to the jury instructions. Finding no reversible error, we AFFIRM her conviction.

I

The scheme charged involved Comcast Corporation, a cable television provider in Mississippi, and the use of an American Express credit card. At trial the government maintained that Gianakos falsely billed Comcast for services purportedly performed by her advertising agency, Gia-nakos Associates (“GA”). Primestar, the name under which Comcast offered satellite television services, was GA’s largest client. According to the government, *515 David Van Colvin, Primestar’s general manager and the son of a Comcast executive, had Gianakos pay his American Express (“AmEx”) bill. Gianakos would, in turn, bill the payment to Comcast as a marketing expense, with a markup that ranged from ten to thirty-three percent. Although Gianakos argued at trial that she accepted Colvin’s representations that the AmEx charges were for legitimate marketing expenses, Colvin used the AmEx card for various personal expenses and never submitted the statements to Gianakos so that she could confirm the nature of the charges. Between 1994 and 1996, Giana-kos billed Comcast for almost $2.5 million; on these billings, she was paid over $350,000 in markups.

Newell was a vice president of Trust-mark National Bank in Meridian and Col-vin’s close friend. When Colvin wanted to build a home next to Newell’s, Newell helped Colvin buy the lot and introduced him to Raley, a home builder. He also arranged for Trustmark to make the construction loan. As the construction loan was depleted, Colvin began using his AmEx card to pay to complete the home. The government urged at trial that Newell became a willing participant in Colvin’s fraudulent AmEx billing scheme, using the AmEx card for Newell’s own personal expenses.

There was evidence at trial that after Raley finished building Colvin’s house, Newell suggested that Raley become an AmEx vendor. Raley applied for an AmEx vendor account under the name “Raley Builders.” The account was set up so charges could run through Colvin’s AmEx card. When Raley received his card imprinter, he gave it to Newell, who kept it in his office at the bank. Newell would imprint Colvin’s AmEx card and bill AmEx large amounts of money for the charges. At times, Raley went to Newell’s office to sign for the amounts submitted to AmEx, and at other times he allowed New-ell to sign his name. There was evidence at trial that Newell used the card both to get money for projects in which he and Colvin were involved, and for his own personal expenses. From November 1994 until July 1996, AmEx paid Raley Builders over $1.1 million for charges on Colvin’s AmEx card. 3

II

At trial, Newell and Raley were represented by the same attorney, Henry Palmer. 4 Raley was acquitted and Newell was convicted. Although the judge questioned Newell before trial about potential conflicts of interest and Newell elected to proceed, he argues that he did not waive his right to conflict-free counsel. Alternatively, he contends that the actual conflict and its dimensions did not surface until trial and were in any event so egregious as to be at the least beyond the scope of any waiver resulting from the court’s inquiry before trial, if waivable at all.

“The [S]ixth [A]mendment right to effective assistance of counsel derives from the defendant’s fundamental right to a fair trial, a goal best achieved by ensuring that the process involves vigorous partisan advocacy by both sides.” 5 Thus, *516 “[t]he right to the effective assistance of counsel is ... the right of the accused to require the prosecution’s case to survive the crucible of meaningful adversarial testing.” 6 When a defendant has been able to show that his counsel “ ‘actively [represented] conflicting interests and that [an] actual conflict of interest adversely affected his lawyer’s performance,’ constitutional error has occurred, and prejudice is inherent in the conflict.” 7 A lawyer places himself in an impossible situation when the defense of one client is perforce to the detriment of another client. 8

In cases where a defendant demonstrates such a conflict of interest, we ask whether the defendant freely and validly waived his right to representation by a conflict-free attorney. 9 Applying Cuyler, we do not ask whether the actual conflict prejudiced the appellant’s defense. 10 Prejudice is presumed upon a showing of an actual conflict, not waived by the defendant. 11

In Beets v. Scott, we explained that “[n]ot all conflicts of interest that affect the attorney’s ‘duty of loyalty’ have the same consequences, and they are not all suited to Cuyler' s stringent rule.” 12 Rather, “Strickland more appropriately gauges an attorney’s conflict of interest that springs not from multiple client representation but from a conflict between the attorney’s personal interest and that of his client.” 13 The reason for the distinction was as clear then as it is today:

When multiple representation exists, the source and consequences of the ethical problem are straightforward: “counsel represents two clients with competing interests and is torn between two duties. Counsel can properly turn in no direction.

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Bluebook (online)
315 F.3d 510, 60 Fed. R. Serv. 669, 2002 U.S. App. LEXIS 26339, 2002 WL 31835054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-newell-ca5-2002.