United States v. Ralph Merrill

685 F.3d 1002, 2012 WL 2400744
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedJune 27, 2012
Docket11-11432
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 685 F.3d 1002 (United States v. Ralph Merrill) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh 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. Ralph Merrill, 685 F.3d 1002, 2012 WL 2400744 (11th Cir. 2012).

Opinion

PRYOR, Circuit Judge:

When Ralph Merrill sold millions of rounds of ammunition to the United States Army, he concealed that the ammunition was manufactured by a Communist Chinese military company because his contract with the Army prohibited the delivery of that kind of ammunition. He even went so far as to have the ammunition repackaged, which made it unsafe for later use. Merrill was convicted for conspiracy to commit false statements, major fraud, and wire fraud against the United States, 18 U.S.C. § 371, and for major fraud and wire fraud, 18 U.S.C. §§ 2, 1343. On appeal, Merrill argues that the district court misinterpreted the regulation that prohibits the Department of Defense from acquiring munitions manufactured by a Communist Chinese military company, the regulation does not apply to the ammunition he sold, and that he did not defraud the government because he did not misrepresent a material fact when he lied about the origin of the ammunition. Merrill’s argument fails because his interpretation of the statute is flawed and, more fundamentally, is irrelevant to his misconduct. Merrill also argues that his convictions should be overturned because the district court excluded evidence of purported government knowledge about the origin of the ammunition, denied his motion to suppress, denied his motion to compel the government to produce handwritten notes from investigators, admitted a redacted version of a suppression hearing transcript, and refused to direct the government to grant immunity to a witness. Merrill also contends that the government did not produce sufficient evidence to support his convictions for major fraud and wire fraud. Because all of Merrill’s arguments fail, we affirm his convictions.

I. BACKGROUND

We divide our discussion of the background of this appeal into two parts. We first discuss the facts that led to Merrill’s arrest. We then review the procedural history of this appeal.

A. Conduct That Led to Merrill’s Arrest

In August 2006, the United States Army solicited a bid from AEY, a munitions dealership based in Miami Beach, Florida, for *1006 a contract to supply the Afghanistan Security Forces with various types of military munitions including nearly 500 million rounds of AK-47 ammunition. Ralph Merrill, an investor in AEY, was heavily involved in the operations of the company. Merrill advised AEY about how to prepare its bid, inquired with his contacts in the arms business about prices of the ammunition to be supplied under the contract, and attested to the Army that AEY had experience performing this type of contract. When the Army requested further details about the financial viability of AEY, Merrill provided letters on behalf of two of his companies that promised to loan a total of $36 million to AEY in support of the contract. Merrill and Efraim Diveroli, the president of AEY, agreed that they would split the profits from the Afghan contract evenly. AEY submitted a final bid price of $298 million, and the Army awarded it the contract.

The contract provided that for two years AEY would supply certain ammunition to the Afghan National Police and the Afghan National Army as needed. The contract required AEY to certify that each shipment of ammunition was serviceable and conformed to the requirements of the contract. A specific question on the certificate of conformance asked where the ammunition was manufactured.

The contract expressly incorporated a Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement clause that provided that “[a]ny supplies or services covered by the United States Munitions List that are delivered under this contract may not be acquired, directly or indirectly, from a Communist Chinese military company.” 48 C.F.R. § 252.225-7007. This prohibition was included in the e-mail that AEY forwarded to Merrill to notify him that AEY had won the contract. David Packouz, a vice-president at AEY, testified that the prohibition is “widely known in the arms industry.”

The main supplier that AEY used to fill its orders was MEICO, an Albanian munitions dealership. When Alexander Podrizki of AEY arrived in Albania to oversee shipping operations, he noticed Chinese characters on the wooden crates containing the ammunition and notified Diveroli and Packouz. Packouz was nervous because he knew that AEY could not deliver Chinese ammunition, that MEICO accounted for approximately 95 percent of the ammunition covered by the first two Afghan orders, and that AEY was already late in delivering the ammunition.

Merrill, Diveroli, and Packouz discussed whether the Chinese ammunition might be legal because it had been acquired by MEICO in the 1960s and 1970s, before the United States had enacted an arms embargo against China. They decided that Diveroli should ask the State Department if AEY could legally sell the ammunition to the Army. They chose not to ask the Army if it would accept the Chinese ammunition because if the Army said “no,” AEY would have a “big problem.” They decided not to seek ammunition from another source because those efforts would further delay already overdue deliveries. Merrill, Diveroli, and Packouz agreed that, if the State Department informed them that the arms could not be sold legally, they would repackage the ammunition to eliminate the Chinese characters and ship it. On April 23, 2007, Diveroli asked the Directorate of Defense Trade Controls Response Team at the State Department in an e-mail if it was legal to broker “Chinese Ammunition that has been sitting for about 20 years with a company in Albania.” The same day, the State Department replied that “US policy ... would not authorize the transaction. Exceptions to this policy require a presidential determination.”

*1007 On April 25, 2007, Merrill sent an e-mail to Packouz and Diveroli that contained photographs that showed how to remove the Chinese characters from the wooden crates with scraping tools. When they discovered that the tins that held the ammunition also had Chinese characters, they decided that they would paint the tins to cover the writing. They then discovered that the hermetically-sealed tins contained paper inside that bore Chinese characters. Although removing the papers required them to destroy the vacuum seal, which could make the ammunition unsafe for the battlefield, Packouz, Merrill, and Diveroli decided to open the tins, remove the paper, and repackage the ammunition in cardboard boxes.

By June 2007, AEY began shipping the repackaged ammunition to Afghanistan. Packouz testified that AEY sent at least 30 certificates of conformance to Afghanistan that contained the false statement that the manufacturer of the ammunition was MEI-CO, not the Communist Chinese military companies that had actually manufactured the ammunition. In October 2007, an investigator from the Department of Defense and an agent from the United States Department of Immigration and Customs Enforcement traveled to Albania to investigate AEY.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
685 F.3d 1002, 2012 WL 2400744, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-ralph-merrill-ca11-2012.