United States v. Paul M. Baldinger

838 F.2d 176, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 1195, 1988 WL 5622
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 1, 1988
Docket85-5687
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 838 F.2d 176 (United States v. Paul M. Baldinger) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth 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. Paul M. Baldinger, 838 F.2d 176, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 1195, 1988 WL 5622 (6th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

ENGEL, Circuit Judge.

This appeal requires us to decide whether letters mailed to customers of appellant’s business associate falsely and maliciously stating that his associate was conducting polygraph examinations without a license constituted a “scheme or artifice to defraud” within the mail fraud statute, 18 U.S.C. § 1341.

Paul M. Baldinger appeals his conviction following a jury trial in the United States District Court for the Middle District of Tennessee on twenty counts of mail fraud. Baldinger and Roger Fleming were licensed polygraph examiners engaged in separate practices. For some time, they maintained an amicable business relationship. In 1981, they informally agreed to provide services for each other’s clients when one of them was unavailable, and in 1982 they began to share office space. Later in 1982, however, a dispute arose between them when Fleming acquired an account that Baldinger had been pursuing.

*178 In an attempt to get even, Baldinger volunteered in December, 1982, to pay the annual fee for renewing Fleming’s polygraph examiner’s license. He wrote out a check to the Tennessee Polygraph Examiners Board, and Fleming prepared the envelope. But Baldinger removed the envelope from the outgoing mail and the envelope never reached the Board. In May and June, 1983, Baldinger mailed letters to nineteen of Fleming’s clients. The letters stated that Fleming was administering polygraph examinations without a license and advised the clients to avoid further testing until the licensing matter was corrected. Several of the letters to Fleming’s clients gave the appearance that they were sent by the Polygraph Examiners Board, while others purported to be sent by “Ronald D. Abernathy, Director.”

Baldinger also mailed an anonymous letter to Victor Hartman, a test subject, who had been examined by Fleming in the course of a job application. The test results indicated dishonesty on Hartman’s part. The letter to Hartman stated that Fleming was unlicensed and that Hartman could file a complaint with the Polygraph Examiners Board or that he might “wish to bring a law suit against Mr. Fleming ... and collect a considerable settlement in cash for their illegal testing.” Baldinger included with the letter a proposed complaint that he drafted.

Baldinger was indicted on twenty counts of mail fraud in violation of 18 U.S.C. §§ 1341 and 1342. 1 The indictment alleges that Baldinger “devise[d] a scheme and artifice to defraud Roger Fleming and persons doing business with Fleming of their right to conduct business free of false, fictitious, and fraudulent information concerning the status of Fleming’s polygraph license.” The indictment characterizes Fleming as “a business associate of the defendant,” and the indictment goes on to allege the specific acts described above.

Baldinger moved to dismiss the indictment on the ground that it did not allege a violation of section 1341. The district court denied the motion. A jury found Baldinger guilty on all twenty counts. He was sentenced to three years of imprisonment on Count 1, to be followed by probation for concurrent periods of three years on each of Counts 2 through 20.

After we heard oral argument in this case, the Supreme Court announced its opinion in McNally v. United States, — U.S. -, 107 S.Ct. 2875, 97 L.Ed.2d 292 (1987). Convinced that McNally could have a major impact on this case, we requested additional briefing. Since that time the Supreme Court has further refined its opinion about the scope of section 1341 in Carpenter v. United States, — U.S. -, 108 S.Ct. 316, 98 L.Ed.2d 275 (1987).

The defendants in McNally were Kentucky government officials who were charged with diverting the commissions for the State of Kentucky’s workmen’s compensation policies from the insurance agency deserving them to certain other agencies, including ones they controlled. They were convicted for violating section 1341 on the theory that they had sought to “defraud the citizens and government of Ken *179 tucky of their right to have the Commonwealth’s affairs conducted honestly.” McNally, 107 S.Ct. at 2875. In reversing the conviction, the Court stated that “those commissions were not the Commonwealth’s money ... the premium for insurance would have been paid to some agency.” Id. at 2882.

As written, McNally left us with at least some uncertainty whether it might have been intended to limit prosecutions only in cases involving the corruption of public officials. The Court announced that “[t]he mail fraud statute clearly protects property rights, but does not refer to the intangible right of the citizenry to good government.” Id. at 2879. However, in some of its language it seemed to take a broader approach, announcing that it “read § 1341 as limited in scope to the protection of property rights.” Id. at 2881.

While we are not certain that the last word has yet been spoken, we find at least some clarification in the Supreme Court’s decision just issued in Carpenter v. United States, supra. In Carpenter, the Court applied McNally to the case of a financial columnist for the Wall Street Journal and his friends who had profited on the stock market by trading based on the columnist’s information before it was published. The Court found that Carpenter and his associates could be convicted under section 1341 because the Wall Street Journal’s interest in keeping its stories confidential until publication was a property interest.

Carpenter stands for the narrow principle that McNally was not intended to exclude from the purview of section 1341 fraudulent schemes and artifices merely because the property interest involved was normally defined as an intangible one. Had the Supreme Court conceived that McNally was limited only to the dishonest acts and corruption of public officials, it would, of course, never have felt it necessary in Carpenter to go beyond stating that fact and noting that Carpenter itself only involved a purely private wrongdoing. From this, we are led to conclude that while the Supreme Court recognized both tangible and intangible property interests, they nonetheless clearly intended to exclude from the reach of the mail fraud statute claims which did not involve a direct intention to deprive another of a recognized and traditional property right (tangible or intangible) through the employment of fraud or other artifice and the use of the public mail. In our view, therefore, McNally rejects that line of cases which predicates criminal liability only upon general acts of dishonesty or illegality unrelated to motives of property gain, whatever its nature. See e.g., United States v. Margiotta, 688 F.2d 108 (2d Cir.1982); United States v.

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Bluebook (online)
838 F.2d 176, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 1195, 1988 WL 5622, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-paul-m-baldinger-ca6-1988.