United States v. Regan

699 F. Supp. 36, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11771, 1988 WL 121455
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. New York
DecidedOctober 20, 1988
Docket88 Cr. 517 (RLC)
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 699 F. Supp. 36 (United States v. Regan) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. New York primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Regan, 699 F. Supp. 36, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11771, 1988 WL 121455 (S.D.N.Y. 1988).

Opinion

ROBERT L. CARTER, District Judge.

All but two of the outstanding issues have already been disposed of in open court, and those two issues will be determined in this memorandum, which for the convenience of the parties will also summarize all the prior dispositions. Thus, the parties may look to this memorandum for a procedural profile of the case up to the present, rather than being required to canvass each of the transcripts to determine the status of the various issues raised.

These defendants have been charged under a 35 count indictment with conspiracy to commit securities, mail and wire fraud, with conspiracy to file fraudulent tax returns, with conspiracy to participate in a racketeering enterprise and actual participation therein, and with conspiracy to conduct the affairs of the enterprise through a pattern of racketeering activity in violation of Title 18, United States Code, §§ 1962(c) and 1962(a) and actual participation therein. Pursuant to the RICO violations, the government seeks forfeiture of all the defendants’ interest in the enterprise (which are Princeton/Newport partnerships) and the proceeds of the illegal activity.

An order was entered putting the partnerships’ operations under effective governmental restraint and control, and restraints were placed on all defendants’ reachable assets to secure the government’s forfeitable interests in event of conviction, leaving defendants access to sufficient funds for living expenses and payment of their lawyers fees.

The partnerships appealed. The individual defendants did not. The Court of Appeals upheld the government’s right to the restraints imposed but ruled that the government was required to seek, if possible, less burdensome restraints on the defendants’ partnerships’ interests by permitting the posting of a bond sufficient to cover and secure the equivalent of defendants’ potentially forfeitable property that the government would be entitled to receive on conviction. See United States v. Regan, 858 F.2d 115 (1988).

On remand after a hearing, the government was instructed to quantify the forfeitable property of defendants it regarded itself entitled to on conviction and to accept a bond in that amount. The court determined that the forfeitable property *38 the government is entitled to secure is the interest of the defendants in the partnerships during the period of the alleged crimes (July 1, 1984 to February 12, 1986). The government seeks accretions in the defendants’ partnership interests subsequent to February 12, 1986, but the court construes the penalty imposed by the RICO statute on a defendant’s untainted property as being in the nature of a fine that is fixed and final as of the time of the crime. The parties were instructed to compute the amount involved, and when the defendants post a bond in that amount, an order is to be submitted to the court for signature dissolving the current governmental encumbrances of the activities of the partnerships. The defendants have agreed, as I understand it, that no activity will occur in certain of the partnerships except on notice to the government. That agreement is not affected by the instant disposition.

Defendants argue that they are entitled to a hearing at which time the government would be required to establish its entitlement to continue to impose restraints on defendants’ property. Defendants contend that due process considerations require the government to sustain the burden of proof justifying continuation of these restraints. As I read 18 U.S.C. § 1963(d)(1), the government is entitled on indictment to apply to the court for a satisfactory performance bond or other restraints to secure the potentially forfeitable property of the indicted defendants. All the government is required to do at that stage is to articulate a cogent thesis or theory of its entitlement, thereby affording defendants sufficient notice of the government’s claim to enable them to prepare a defense.

The Court of Appeals decision is in accord with this analysis. While it is true, the individual defendants before me were not parties to the appeal, implicit in the Court’s holding was a rejection of defendants’ present contention that the government must establish the right to forfeiture at a pretrial hearing. The Court indicated that before the government’s right to the burdensome restraints imposed could be approved, a less onerous alternative should be sought. There was no intimation of the necessity for the government to give defendants a preview of its evidence at trial to justify a continued restraint on defendant’s property to insure the availability of defendants’ forfeitable assets on conviction.

Defendants may request a pre-trial hearing on the government’s claims, but it is the defendants’ burden at such hearing to establish the insufficiency of the indictment and of the government’s theory as a matter of law and/or fact.

At an October 19, 1988 hearing defendants Newberg, Smotrich and Zarzecki, for all the partner-defendants, disputed the government’s right to secure forfeiture of the salaries of all the defendants, to hold Newberg liable for the illegal profits made by Drexel Burnham pursuant to Newberg’s fraudulent securities manipulations and contested as a matter of law the sufficiency of wire and mail fraud counts as predicate acts for the RICO violations.

The government’s right to secure as potentially forfeitable the salaries of the partner-defendants gives me no pause. I categorize that as part of their interest in the partnerships and, find them, therefore, forfeitable.

The salary of Steven Smotrich, a Princeton/Newport employee with no other property in the partnerships, and the salary of Bruce Newberg, a Drexel Burnham employee with no interest in the partnerships, are in a different category. The government theory for forfeiture is that but for their participation in the illegal schemes, their salaries would not have been paid.

Smotrich and Newberg established at the October 19,1988 hearing that their salaries were on a par with those of other similarly situated employees in the industry. They contend that this evidence, which the government does not contest, constitutes a prima facie showing that the government’s rationale for holding their salaries forfeita-ble is without merit. Accordingly, they argue, the government must now come forward with evidence to overcome their pri-ma facie case. Defendants, however, have met their burden only in part. In addition *39 to showing that the salaries they received were consonant with industry-wide practice, they must also show that they would have retained their jobs even if they had refused to obey the orders of their superiors to engage in illegal activities during the period in question. The latter is necessary to meet the government’s but for thesis. No such showing was made. Accordingly, the government is entitled to continue restraints on Smotrich’s and Newberg’s assets to hold secure the equivalent of their salaries for the period in question as potentially forfeitable to the government.

The government has placed restraints on Newberg’s assets to secure an additional $669,000.

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Bluebook (online)
699 F. Supp. 36, 1988 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 11771, 1988 WL 121455, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-regan-nysd-1988.