United States v. Randall Treadwell

CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJanuary 28, 2010
Docket08-50562
StatusPublished

This text of United States v. Randall Treadwell (United States v. Randall Treadwell) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth 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. Randall Treadwell, (9th Cir. 2010).

Opinion

FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,  Plaintiff-Appellee, No. 08-50562 v.  D.C. No. RANDALL T. TREADWELL, 3:05-cr-01570-W-1 Defendant-Appellant. 

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,  Plaintiff-Appellee, No. 09-50023 v.  D.C. No. RICKY D. SLUDER, 3:05-cr-01570-W-3 Defendant-Appellant. 

UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,  No. 09-50024 Plaintiff-Appellee, v.  D.C. No. 3:05-CR-01570-W-4 LARRY C. SATURDAY, OPINION Defendant-Appellant.  Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of California Thomas J. Whelan, District Judge, Presiding

Argued and Submitted November 3, 2009—Pasadena, California

Filed January 28, 2010 1673 1674 UNITED STATES v. TREADWELL Before: Ronald M. Gould and Carlos T. Bea, Circuit Judges, and Donald W. Molloy, District Judge.*

Opinion by Judge Gould

*The Honorable Donald W. Molloy, United States District Judge for the District of Montana, sitting by designation. 1678 UNITED STATES v. TREADWELL

COUNSEL

David J. Zugman, Burcham & Zugman, San Diego, Califor- nia, for defendant-appellant Ricky D. Sluder.

Jami L. Ferrara, Law Office of Jami L. Ferrara, San Diego, California, for defendant-appellant Larry C. Saturday.

Kathryn Thickstun Leff, Law Offices of Kathryn Thickstun Leff, San Diego, California, for defendant-appellant Randall T. Treadwell.

William P. Cole, Assistant U.S. Attorney, San Diego, Califor- nia, for plaintiff-appellee United States of America.

OPINION

GOULD, Circuit Judge:

A federal jury convicted Defendants-Appellants Randall Treadwell, Ricky Sluder, and Larry Saturday (collectively UNITED STATES v. TREADWELL 1679 “defendants”) of wire fraud and conspiracy to commit wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. §§ 371 and 1343. The charges stem from a massive four-year Ponzi scheme in which more than 1,700 investors across the United States lost over $40 million. Sluder and Saturday appeal their convictions; Treadwell, Sluder, and Saturday appeal their sentences. We disagree with the defendants on all counts. We affirm the convictions of Sluder and Saturday and the sentences of all three defendants.

I

On September 8, 2005, Randall Treadwell, Ricky Sluder, and Larry Saturday were indicted by a federal grand jury on one count of conspiracy to commit wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 371 and four counts of wire fraud under 18 U.S.C. § 1343. The indictment alleged that the trio, along with their attorney, Arnulfo Acosta,1 were involved in an extravagant four-year Ponzi scheme2 that ultimately defrauded investors out of more than $40 million. 1 Acosta pled guilty and waived his appeal rights in that agreement. He is not a party to the present appeal. 2 The term Ponzi scheme refers to a fraudulent scheme in which, rather than paying investor returns from investment income, initial investors are paid off with new contributions from additional investors. Black’s Law Dictionary 1198 (8th ed. 2004). Although this may appear to be a good deal for participants at the outset, the underlying economics mean that such a scheme must eventually collapse, when the flow of new funds can no longer support payments required on the earlier funds invested. On col- lapse, the investors lose their remaining investments. Although he was not the first to dream up this type of swindle, the Ponzi scheme is named for Charles Ponzi, the head of the Securities Exchange Company, who became momentarily famous in the 1920s in Boston for selling bonds that, if held for 45 or 90 days, promised returns of 50% and 100% “on any amount invested.” Mitchell Zuckoff, Ponzi’s Scheme 175, 314 (2005). Ponzi’s scheme did not pay out as promised, Ponzi’s fame turned to infamy, and Ponzi was eventually arrested and prosecuted for mail fraud. See id. at 284-88. Despite the apparent notoriety of Ponzi schemes, they continue to dupe investors. It has been reported that Albanian pyramid schemes netted a 1680 UNITED STATES v. TREADWELL Treadwell, Sluder, and Saturday were tried jointly. At trial, the government alleged that beginning in 2001, Treadwell and Sluder set up a series of investment companies, including Qwest International (“Qwest”), Wealth Builders Club (“WBC”), Learn Waterhouse, Inc. (“LWI”), and Grande Bel- gravia (“GB”). Between 2001 and 2005, Treadwell, Sluder, and Saturday—Saturday joining the scheme sometime near the end of 2003 or the beginning 2004—pitched these compa- nies to prospective investors in restaurants and motel confer- ence rooms. Their pitch was simple, though fraudulent: Temporarily “loan” money to these investment companies, they said, and in exchange you will be rewarded with very large future financial returns, and with no risk. It may seem surprising that investors would be so foolish as to fall for such a line, but they did, and in large numbers.

According to the misrepresentations made by the defen- dants, the loans were “zero risk,” often paying returns of 50% interest per month and 2% interest compounded monthly. The defendants claimed that their companies were making invest- ments with “the top three banks in the United States,” had

purported $1.2 billion after the fall of Communism in the 1980s, and that a Florida church in the 1990s amassed $500 million by promising that God would double the money of pious investors. Alex Altman, A Brief History Of: Ponzi Schemes, TIME, Jan. 8, 2009, at 13. Lest one think Ponzi schemes are too simple and obvious to bamboozle the financially savvy, an oil-drilling swindle in the 1970s duped top executives at Pepsico, Time, and General Electric, as well as the chairman of U.S. Trust, the president of First Boston Corp., and an author of several books on Wall Street finance. See Donald H. Dunn, Ponzi! The Boston Swindler xi-xii (1975). Most recently, the 2008 collapse of Bernard “Bernie” Madoff’s grandiose Ponzi scheme resulted in over $50 billion in investor losses, a 150-year prison sentence for Madoff, and numerous investor lawsuits that predict- ably will take years for resolution. See, e.g., Lautenberg Found. v. Madoff, No. 09-816 (SRC), 2009 WL 2928913, at *1 (D.N.J. Sept. 9, 2009). The problems of protecting the public from Ponzi schemes are ongoing; according to the Associated Press, over 150 Ponzi schemes collapsed in 2009. Curt Anderson, ‘09, The Year of the Ponzi Scam, Newsday, Jan. 2, 2010, at A27. UNITED STATES v. TREADWELL 1681 “clients in twenty-nine countries,” made investments guaran- teed by the United States government, had invested $2 billion in a gold mine in Mexico, and were working on a billion- dollar Columbus-era “find” on the bottom of the ocean. In a meeting in October of 2004, Sluder stated that the companies were directing investments towards “humanitarian” projects, including projects benefitting “people that are hungry and . . . in various needs throughout the world.” The defendants’ sales pitch convinced many victims of the fraud; the government alleged, and the defendants did not dispute, that over the course of the four-year operation investors “loaned” over $50 million to the defendants’ companies.

Treadwell often claimed that he had a God-given ability to make money, but in hindsight it appears that his talents lay in extracting funds from duped investors. The purported invest- ments did not exist at all. By the time the defendants’ far- reaching Ponzi scheme collapsed, more than 1,700 investors throughout the United States had lost their investments.

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